Pub. 17, Chapter 37 - Earned Income Credit
Use Part B if you:
- Have a qualifying child, and
- Have met all the rules in Part A.
This part of the chapter discusses Rules 7 through 9. You must meet
all three rules, in addition to the rules in Parts A and
D, to qualify for the earned income credit with a
qualifying child.
You must file Form 1040 or Form 1040A to claim the EIC with a
qualifying child. (You cannot file Form 1040EZ). You must also
complete Schedule EIC and attach it to your return.
If
you do not meet Rule 7, you do not have a qualifying child. Read Part
C to find out if you can get the earned income credit.
Rule 7. Your Child Must Meet the Relationship, Age, and
Residency Tests
Your child is a qualifying child if your child meets three tests.
The three tests are:
- Relationship,
- Age, and
- Residency.
The three tests are illustrated in Figure 37-1. The paragraphs that
follow contain more information about each test.
Relationship Test
Your child must be either your son, daughter, adopted child,
grandchild, stepchild, or eligible foster child. The following
definitions clarify the relationship test.
Adopted child.
Your adopted child includes a child placed with you for adoption by
an authorized placement agency, even if the adoption is not final.
Grandchild.
For the EIC, this means any descendant of your son, daughter, or
adopted child. For example, a grandchild includes your
great-grandchild, great-great-grandchild, etc.
Child not a dependent.
Your child does not have to be your dependent to be a qualifying
child, unless he or she is married.
Married child.
If your child was married at the end of the year, he or she does
not meet the relationship test unless either of these two situations
applies to you.
- You can claim the child's exemption, or
- The reason that you cannot claim the child's exemption is
that you gave that right to your child's other parent:
- When you completed Form 8332 or a similar written statement,
or
- In a pre-1985 agreement (such as a separation agreement or
divorce decree).
Eligible foster child.
For the EIC, a person is your eligible foster child if:
- You cared for that child as you would your own child, and
- The child lived with you for the whole year,
except for temporary absences (explained later).
The
eligible foster child does not have to be related to you.
Example.
You and your sister live together. You are 30. Your sister is 15.
When your parents died 2 years ago, you took over the care of your sister,
but you did not adopt her. Your sister meets the relationship test.
She is considered your eligible foster child because she lived with
you all year and because you cared for her as you would your own child.
Age Test
Your child must be:
- Under age 19 at the end of 1999,
- A full-time student under age 24 at the end of 1999,
or
- Permanently and totally disabled at any time during 1999,
regardless of age.
The following definitions clarify the age test.
Full-time student.
A full-time student is a student who is enrolled for the number of
hours or courses the school considers to be full-time attendance.
Student defined.
To qualify as a student your child must be, during some part of
each of 5 calendar months during the calendar year:
- A full-time student at a school that has a regular teaching
staff, course of study, and regularly enrolled body of students in
attendance, or
- A student taking a full-time, on-farm training course given
by a school described in (1), or a state, county, or local
government.
The
5 calendar months need not be consecutive.
School defined.
A school can be an elementary school, junior and senior high
school, a college, university, or a technical, trade, or mechanical
school. However, on-the-job training courses, correspondence schools,
and night schools do not count as schools for the EIC. (But see
Night school, later.)
Vocational high school students.
Students who work on co-op jobs in private industry as a part of a
school's prescribed course of classroom and practical training are
considered full-time students.
Night school.
Your child is not a full-time student if he or she attends school
only at night. However, full-time attendance at a school may include
some attendance at night as part of a full-time course of study.
Permanently and totally disabled.
Your child is permanently and totally disabled if both
of the following apply.
- He or she cannot engage in any substantial gainful activity because
of a physical or mental condition.
- A doctor determines the condition has lasted or can be expected
to last continuously for at least a year or can lead to death.
Residency Test
Your child must have lived with you in the United States for more
than half of 1999 (all of 1999 if an eligible foster child). The
following definitions clarify the residency test.
Home.
Your home can be any location where you regularly live within one
of the 50 states or the District of Columbia.
Homeless shelter.
You do not need a traditional home. For example, if your child
lived with you for more than half the year in one or more homeless
shelters, your child meets the residency test.
Military personnel stationed outside the United States.
U.S. military personnel stationed outside the United States on
extended active duty are considered to live in the United States
during that duty period for purposes of the EIC.
Extended active duty.
Extended active duty means you are called or ordered to duty for an
indefinite period or for a period of more than 90 days. Once you begin
serving your extended active duty, you are still considered to have
been on extended active duty even if you serve less than 90 days.
Birth or death of a child.
If your child was born or died in 1999, he or she is considered to
meet the residency test if your home was the child's home for the
entire time he or she was alive during 1999.
Temporary absences.
Count time that you or your child is away from home on a temporary
absence due to a special circumstance as time lived at home. Examples
of a special circumstance include:
- Illness,
- Attending school,
- Business,
- Vacation, and
- Military service.
Social security number.
Your qualifying child must have a valid social security number
(SSN) unless the child was born and died in 1999. You cannot claim the
EIC if:
- Your qualifying child's SSN is missing from your tax return
or is incorrect,
- Your qualifying child's SSN was issued solely for use in
applying for or receiving federally funded benefits,
- Your qualifying child's social security card says "Not
valid for employment," or
- Instead of an SSN, your qualifying child has:
- An individual taxpayer identification number (ITIN), which
is issued to a noncitizen who cannot get an SSN, or
- An adoption taxpayer identification number (ATIN), which is
issued to adopting parents who cannot get an SSN for the child being
adopted until the adoption is final.
If you have two qualifying children and only one has a valid SSN,
you can claim the EIC on the basis of that child only. For more
information about SSNs, see SSN that allows you to work,
earlier.
Rule 8. Your Qualifying Child Cannot Be the Qualifying
Child of Another Person With a Higher Modified AGI
Sometimes a child meets the rules to be a qualifying child of more
than one person. However, only one person can claim the credit using
that child. The paragraphs that follow will help you decide who can
claim the EIC when more than one person has the same qualifying child.
Note.
For most people modified AGI is the same as AGI (line 33, Form
1040, line 18, Form 1040A, or line 8, Form 1040EZ). Modified AGI is
explained in detail in Part D.
Which person can claim the EIC.
If you and someone else have the same qualifying child, the person
with the higher modified adjusted gross income (AGI) is the only one
who may be able to claim the EIC using that child. The person with the
lower modified AGI cannot use that child to claim the EIC. This is
true even if the person with the higher modified AGI does not claim
the EIC or meet all of the rules to claim the EIC. If the other person
is your spouse and you file a joint return, this rule does not apply.
If three or more persons have the same qualifying child, the person
with the highest modified AGI is the only one who may be able to claim
the EIC.
If your qualifying child meets the tests to be a qualifying child
of any other person for 1999 and you have the higher modified AGI, you
meet this rule. If you do not have the higher modified AGI,
STOP. You cannot claim the credit either with or without a
qualifying child. Put "No" beside line 59a (Form 1040) or line
37a (Form 1040A).
Example 1.
You and your son lived with your mother all year. You are 25 years
old. Your only income was $9,300 from a part-time job. Your mother's
only income was $15,000 from her job.
Your son is a qualifying child of both you and your mother because
he meets the relationship, age, and residency tests for both you and
your mother. However, because you both have the same qualifying child,
only one of you can claim the EIC. Because your mother's modified AGI
($15,000) is more than your modified AGI ($9,300), only your mother
may be able to claim the EIC. You cannot claim the credit for persons
either with or without a qualifying child.
Example 2.
The facts are the same as in Example 1, but your mother
had investment income of $3,000. Your mother cannot claim the EIC
because her investment income is more than $2,350. (See Rule 5.) Even
though your mother cannot claim the EIC, you cannot claim it either
because your mother's modified AGI is more than yours.
Example 3.
You and your sister shared a household for the entire year. You
have 3 young children who lived in the household. Your sister does not
have any children. However, she cares for your children as if they
were her own. You earn $15,000 and she earns $20,000. Neither of you
had any other income.
The children meet the age and residency tests for both you and your
sister. They meet the relationship test for you because they are your
children. They also meet the relationship test for your sister because
they lived with her in the same household for the whole year and she
cared for them as if they were her own. Therefore, they qualify as her
eligible foster children.
Your children are qualifying children for both you and your sister.
However, because your sister's modified AGI is higher than yours, she
is the only one who can claim the credit.
You
and your sister cannot split the three qualifying children between you.
You cannot claim the credit even though your sister enters the names
of only two of the children on her Schedule EIC. (Schedule EIC has spaces
for the names of only two qualifying children because the credit is
the same amount for two or more qualifying children.)
Example 4.
The facts are the same as in Example 3, except that your
oldest child is a full-time college student. Your sister does not care
for this child as if the child were her own. Only the two younger
children are qualifying children of both you and your sister. Your
sister is the only one who may be able to claim the EIC on the basis
of these two children because her modified AGI is higher than your
modified AGI. Your oldest child is a qualifying child of you, but not
your sister. Only you may be able to claim the EIC on the basis of
this child.
Example 5.
You, your spouse, and your 10-year-old-son lived together until
July 15, 1999, when your spouse moved out of the household. In
November 1999, you and your spouse were divorced. Your modified AGI
was $13,000. Your former spouse's modified AGI was $18,000. Your son
is a qualifying child of both you and your former spouse, because your
son lived with each of you for more than half the year. However,
because your former spouse's modified AGI ($18,000) was more than your
modified AGI ($13,000), only your former spouse can claim the earned
income credit for 1999.
Unmarried couples living together.
If an unmarried couple lives together with a qualifying child of
both persons, the person with the higher modified AGI is the only one
who may be eligible to claim the credit. The person with the lower
modified AGI cannot claim the credit either with or without a
qualifying child.
Rule 9. You Cannot Be a Qualifying Child of Another Person
If you (or your spouse if filing a joint return) are a qualifying
child of another person, you cannot claim the EIC. This is true even
if the person for whom you are a qualifying child does not claim the
EIC or meet all of the rules to claim the EIC. Put "No" beside
line 59a (Form 1040) or line 37a (Form 1040A).
Basically, you are a qualifying child of another person (your
parent, guardian, foster parent, etc.) if:
- You are that person's son, daughter, adopted child,
stepchild, grandchild, or eligible foster child,
- At the end of the year you were under age 19, under age 24
and a full-time student, or any age if you were permanently and
totally disabled at any time during the year, and
- You lived with that person in the United States for more
than half of the year (all year if you were an eligible foster child).
For the EIC, U.S. military personnel stationed outside the United
States on extended active duty are considered to live in the United
States during that duty period. See Military personnel stationed
outside the United States earlier, if you need more
information.
Example.
You and your daughter lived with your mother all year. You are 22
years old and attended a trade school full time. You had a part-time
job and earned $5,700. You had no other income. Because you meet the
relationship, age, and residency tests, you are a qualifying child of
your mother. She can claim the EIC if she meets all the other
requirements. Because you are your mother's qualifying child, you
cannot claim the EIC. This is so even if your mother cannot or does
not claim the EIC.
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