Chapter 4 Flashcards
Tax payable/refund, dependency, filing status
Gross income
All realized income (generated in a transaction with a second party where there is a measurable change in property rights between parties). Ex - appreciation in stock investment not realized unless stock is sold.
Exclusions
Realized income items taxpayers permanently excluded from income.
Deferrals
Realized income items that taxpayers include in gross income in a subsequent year.
How does somebody qualify as a dependent of another person?
1) Must be a citizen of the US or a resident of the US, Canada or Mexico.
2) Must not file a return with his or her spouse unless there is no tax liability on the couple’s joint return and there would not have been any tax liability on either spouse’s tax return if they had filed separately.
3) Must be considered either a qualifying child or a qualifying relative of the taxpayer.
How is somebody considered a qualifying child of a taxpayer?
They must satisfy the relationship, age, residence and support tests.
Relationship test (qualifying child)
A qualifying child must be an eligible relative of the taxpayer. This includes: The child or descendant of a child. For this purpose, a child includes a taxpayer’s adopted child, stepchild and eligible foster child. Sibling or descendant of a sibling. For this purpose, a sibling includes a taxpayer’s half-brother/sister, stepbrother/sister.
Age test (qualifying child)
Must be younger than the taxpayer and either under age 19 at the end of the year or under age 24 at the end of the year AND a full-time student. Full-time student if in school during any part of each five calendar months during the year. An individual of any age who is permanently and totally disabled qualifies.
Residence test (qualifying child)
Must have same residence as taxpayer for MORE than half the year. Time that a child or taxpayer is temporarily away from taxpayer’s home because child or taxpayer is ill, is pursuing an education or has another special circumstance counts as though child or taxpayer were living in taxpayer’s home.
Support test (qualifying child)
Qualifying child must NOT have provided their own support for the year. Such support generally includes:
Food, school lunches, toilet articles, haircuts
Clothing
Recreation - toys, summer camp, horseback riding, entertainment, vacations expenses, etc.
Medical and dental care
Child care expenses
Allowances and gifts
Wedding costs
Lodging
Education - includes board, uniforms at military, tuition. When determining who provided support for a taxpayer’s child who is a full-time student, scholarships are excluded from the computation.
How is somebody considered a qualifying relative of a taxpayer?
The individual is not a qualifying child and they satisfy a relationship, support and gross income test.
How does an individual meet the qualifying relative relationship test?
The individual has a qualifying family relationship with the taxpayer, or meets the qualifying relative “member of the household” test.
What does a qualifying family relationship with the taxpayer include? (Qualifying relative)
Descendant or ancestor of the taxpayer. For this purpose, a child includes a taxpayer’s adopted child, stepchild and eligible foster child, and a parent includes a stepfather/mother.
A sibling of the taxpayer, including a stepbrother/sister.
A niece or nephew (cousins do not qualify).
An aunt or uncle.
An in-law (mother/father, sister/brother, son/daughter).
How does a person meet the qualifying relative “member of the household” test?
The person has the same principal place of abode as the taxpayer for the entire year (even if person does not have a qualifying family relationship with the taxpayer.)
What does the support test require? (Qualifying relative)
Taxpayer pays more than half the qualifying relative’s support/living expenses (different from child test). Support/living expenses include food, medicine, clothes, etc. Scholarships of children of a taxpayer who are full-time students are excluded from the support test. Under multiple support agreement, taxpayers who don’t pay over half of an individual’s support may still be allowed to claim the individual under qualifying relative rules if the following applies:
How can a taxpayer who doesn’t pay over half of an individual’s support still claim the individual as a dependent? (Qualifying relative)
1) No one taxpayer paid over one-half of the individual’s support.
2) Taxpayer and at least one other person provided more than half the individual’s support, and taxpayer and other person would have been allowed to claim the individual as a dependent except for the fact that they did not provide over half of the support of the individual.
3) Taxpayer contributed over 10% of individual’s support for the year.
4) Each other person who provided over 10% of individual’s support provides a signed statement to the taxpayer agreeing not to claim the individual as a dependent.