Should I Include a Dependent's Income on My Tax Return?
The definition of a dependent for tax purposes includes both qualifying children and qualifying relatives. Qualifying children must meet four criteria:
- They must be your child or stepchild, or a brother, sister, stepsibling or foster child. Descendants of these people also qualify, like your niece.
- They must have lived in your residence with you for at least half of the tax year.
- They must be under age 19 (24 if a full-time student) at the end of the tax year, or be permanently disabled.
- The child must not have provided more than half of her own financial support during the year.
A qualifying relative, as opposed to a qualifying child, is defined as someone whom you support financially who lives with you in your residence (whether related or not), or someone directly related to you whom you support.
A relative you support does not have to live with you. In order to meet the relation definition, the relative must be a child who is not a qualifying child, a sibling (including step and half), a direct ancestor, niece, nephew, aunt, or uncle, or their spouses. A qualifying relative must also have less than $3,700 in gross income for the year and receive more than half of his financial support from you.
These are the general criteria the Internal Revenue Service uses to determine who is a dependent, but particular credits and exemptions have other rules.
Dependents who are not 65 or older or blind, who have earned income more than $5,800, must file their own return. Income levels required to file a return for those 65 and over or blind are higher. You do not include their earned income on your taxes. If they earned less than $5,800 in the year, they do not have to file a return, but may wish to do so to recover any withheld income taxes. You can still claim the dependent exemption, and the dependent will not be able to claim her personal exemption on her own return.
Dependents who have unearned income, such as interest, dividends or capital gains, will generally have to file their own tax return if that income is more than $950 for the year (income levels are higher for dependents 65 or older or blind) .
A parent can elect to claim the child's unearned income on the parent's return if certain criteria are met. If the dependent child's unearned income is between $950 and $9,500, he made no estimated tax payments during the year, and he had no income tax withheld at the source, parents can generally elect to claim his investment income on their own return.
This election, using IRS Form 8814, simplifies the reporting of the income and makes it so that the child does not have to file a separate return; however, it can create more overall tax liability, depending on the parents' tax situation. A child may pay as low a tax rate at 0 percent, whereas the parents will likely be paying a higher rate.
On investment income over $1,900, however, children will be taxed at the parents' rate anyway, even if they file their own returns. Consider calculating the overall impact on taxes of each method before choosing. (TurboTax can help with this.)
