You are a qualifying child of another person (your parent, guardian, foster parent, etc.) if all of the following statements are true.
- 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, or under age 24 and a full-time student, or any age if you were permanently and totally
disabled at any time during the year.
- 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 more details about the tests to be a qualifying child, see Rule 7.
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" directly to the right of
line 61a (Form 1040) or line 39a (Form 1040A), or on line 9b (Form 1040EZ).
Example.
Qualifying child of another person
You lived with your mother all year. You are age 26 and permanently and totally disabled. Your only income was from a community center where you
went twice a week to answer telephones. You earned $1,500 for the year. 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 a qualifying child of your mother, you
cannot claim the EIC. This is so even if your mother cannot or does not claim the EIC.
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