Publication 907 |
2000 Tax Year |
Itemized Deductions
If you file Form 1040, you can either claim the standard deduction
or itemize your deductions. You must use Schedule A (Form 1040) to
itemize your deductions. See your form instructions for information on
the standard deduction and the deductions you can itemize. The
following discussions highlight some itemized deductions that are of
particular interest to persons with disabilities.
Medical Expenses
You can deduct medical and dental expenses for you, your spouse,
and your dependents.
Medical expenses include payments you make for the diagnosis, cure,
mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease and for treatment
affecting any part or function of the body. They also include the cost
of transportation for needed medical care and payments for medical
insurance.
You can deduct only the part of your medical and dental expenses
that is more than 7.5% of your adjusted gross income shown on line 34,
Form 1040.
The following list contains only highlights. For more detailed
information, get Publication 502,
Medical and Dental Expenses.
Special Items and Equipment
Your medical expenses can include payments for any of the following
items.
- Artificial limbs, eyeglasses, and hearing aids.
- The part of the cost of Braille books and magazines that is
more than the price of regular printed editions.
- Cost and repair of special telephone equipment for
hearing-impaired persons.
- Cost of equipment that displays the audio part of television
programs as subtitles for hearing-impaired persons.
- Cost and maintenance of a wheelchair or autoette.
- Cost and care of a guide dog or other animal aiding a person
with a disability.
- A therapist or other person who gives "patterning"
exercises to a mentally retarded child.
- Special schools, if the main reason for using the school is
its resources for relieving a mental or physical disability. This
includes the cost of teaching and the cost of remedial language
training to correct a condition caused by a birth defect.
- Premiums for qualified long-term care insurance, up to
certain amounts.
- Improvements to your home that do not increase its value if
the main purpose is medical care. An example is constructing entrance
or exit ramps to your home.
Improvements to your home that do increase its value, if
the main purpose is medical care, may be partly included as a medical
expense. See Publication 502
for more information.
Impairment-Related Work Expenses
If you are an employee and have a physical or mental disability
that functionally limits your employment, or a physical or mental
impairment that substantially limits one or more of your major life
activities, you may be able to claim impairment-related work expenses.
These are your allowable business expenses for attendant care at your
workplace and other expenses in connection with your workplace that
are necessary for you to work.
If you have impairment-related work expenses, complete Form 2106,
Employee Business Expenses, or Form 2106-EZ,
Unreimbursed Employee Business Expenses, and attach it to
your Form 1040.
Employee business expenses are subject to a
2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit. However, impairment-related work
expenses are not subject to the 2% limit.
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