IRS Tax Forms  
Publication 17 2000 Tax Year

Reporting Child’s Interest & Dividends

You may be able to elect to include your child’s interest and dividend income (including capital gain distributions) on your tax return. If you do, your child will not have to file a return.

You can make this election for 2000 only if all the following conditions are met.

  1. Your child was under age 14 on January 1, 2001.
  2. Your child is required to file a return for 2000 unless you make this election.
  3. Your child had income only from interest and dividends (including capital gain distributions and Alaska Permanent Fund dividends).
  4. The dividend and interest income was less than $7,000.
  5. No estimated tax payment was made for 2000 and no 1999 overpayment was applied to 2000 under your child’s name and social security number.
  6. No federal income tax was taken out of your child’s income under the backup withholding rules.
  7. You are the parent whose return must be used when applying the special tax rules for children under 14. (See Which Parent’s Return To Use, earlier.)

These conditions are also shown in Figure 32-A.

Figure 32-A. Can You Include Your Child’s Income On Your Tax Return?

How to make the election. Make the election by attaching Form 8814 to your Form 1040 or Form 1040NR. Attach a separate Form 8814 for each child for whom you make the election. You can make the election for one or more children and not for others.

If you file Form 8814, you cannot file Form 1040A or Form 1040EZ.


Effect of Making the Election

The federal income tax on your child’s income may be more if you make the Form 8814 election rather than file a return for the child.

Rates may be higher. If you use Form 8814, the child’s income may be taxed at a higher rate on your return than it would be on the child’s own return.

Deductions you cannot take. By making the Form 8814 election, you cannot take any of the following deductions the child would be entitled to on his or her return.

  1. The higher standard deduction for a blind child.
  2. The deduction for a penalty on an early withdrawal of your child’s savings.
  3. Itemized deductions (such as your child’s investment expenses or charitable contributions).

Reduced deductions or credits. If you use Form 8814, your increased adjusted gross income may reduce certain deductions or credits on your return. These include your deduction for contributions to a traditional individual retirement arrangement (IRA), itemized deductions for medical expenses, casualty and theft losses, and certain miscellaneous expenses. Your increased adjusted gross income may also reduce your child tax credit, education credit, or earned income credit.

Penalty for underpayment of estimated tax. If you make this election for 2000 and did not have enough tax withheld or pay enough estimated tax to cover the tax you owe, you may be subject to a penalty. If you plan to make this election for 2001, you may need to increase your federal income tax withholding or your estimated tax payments to avoid the penalty. See chapter 5 for more information.


Figuring Child’s Income

Use Part I of Form 8814 to figure your child’s interest and dividend income to report on your return. Only the amount over $1,400 is added to your income. This amount is shown on line 6 of Form 8814. Include this amount on line 21 of Form 1040 or Form 1040NR. Write "Form 8814" in the space next to line 21. If you file more than one Form 8814, include the total amounts from line 6 of all your Forms 8814 on line 21.

Capital gain distributions. If your child’s dividend income included any capital gain distributions, see Capital gain distributions, under Figuring Child’s Income in Publication 929.


Figuring Additional Tax

Use Part II of Form 8814 to figure the tax on the $1,400 of your child’s interest and dividends that you do not include in your income. This tax is added to the tax figured on your income.

This additional tax is the smaller of:

  1. 15% × (your child’s gross income − $700), or
  2. $105.

Include the amount from line 9 of all your Forms 8814 in the total on line 40, Form 1040, or line 39, Form 1040NR. Check box a on Form 1040, line 40, or Form 1040NR, line 39.


Illustrated Example

David and Linda Parks are married and will file separate tax returns for 2000. Their only child, Philip, is 8. Philip received a Form 1099-INT showing $3,200 taxable interest income and a Form 1099-DIV showing $300 ordinary dividends. His parents decide to include that income on one of their returns so they will not have to file a return for Philip.

First, David and Linda each figure their taxable income (Form 1040, line 39) without regard to Philip’s income. David’s taxable income is $41,700 and Linda’s is $59,300. Because her taxable income is greater, Linda can elect to include Philip’s income on her return.

On Form 8814, Linda enters her name and social security number, then Philip’s name and social security number. She enters Philip’s taxable interest income, $3,200, on line 1a. Philip had no tax-exempt interest income, so she leaves line 1b blank. Linda enters Philip’s ordinary dividends, $300, on line 2. Philip did not have any capital gain distributions, so she leaves line 3 blank.

Linda adds lines 1a and 2 and enters the result, $3,500, on line 4. From that amount she subtracts the $1,400 base amount shown on line 5 and enters the result, $2,100, on line 6. This is the part of Philip’s income that Linda must add to her income.

Linda includes the $2,100 in the total on line 21 of her Form 1040 and in the space next to that line prints " Form 8814 - $2,100." Adding that amount to her income increases each of the amounts on lines 22, 33, 34, 37, and 39 of her Form 1040 by $2,100. Linda is not claiming any deductions or credits that are affected by the increase to her income. Therefore, her revised taxable income on line 39 is $61,400 ($59,300 + $2,100).

On Form 8814, Linda subtracts the $700 shown on line 7 from the $3,500 on line 4 and enters the result, $2,800, on line 8. Because that amount is not less than $700, she enters $105 on line 9. This is the tax on the first $1,400 of Philip’s income, which Linda did not have to add to her income. She must add this additional tax to the tax figured on her revised taxable income.

The tax on her $61,400 revised taxable income is $14,602. She adds $105, and enters the $14,707 total on line 40 of Form 1040, and checks box a.

Linda attaches Form 8814 to her Form 1040. Filled-in Form 8814 for Linda Parks

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