Instructions for Schedule 2 (Form 1040A) |
2003 Tax Year |
Child and Dependent Care Expenses for Form 1040A Filers
This is archived information that pertains only to the 2003 Tax Year. If you are looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
If you paid someone to care for your child or other qualifying person so you (and your spouse if filing a joint return) could
work or look for work
in 2003, you may be able to take the credit for child and dependent care expenses. But you must have had earned income to
do so. If you can take the
credit, use Schedule 2 to figure the amount of your credit.
If you (or your spouse if filing a joint return) received any dependent care benefits for 2003, you must use Schedule 2 to
figure the amount, if any, of the benefits you may exclude from your income on
Form 1040A, line 7. You must complete Part III of Schedule 2 before you can figure the credit, if any, in Part II.
Additional Information.
See
Pub. 503 for more details about the credit.
- The dollar limit on the amount of qualified expenses that can be used to figure the credit has been increased to $3,000 for
one qualifying
person; $6,000 for two or more qualifying persons.
- The maximum credit has been increased to $1,050 for the care of one qualifying person; $2,100 for the care of two or more
qualifying
persons.
Dependent Care Benefits.
These include amounts your employer paid directly to either you or your care provider for the care of your qualifying
person(s) while you worked.
These benefits also include the fair market value of care in a day-care facility provided or sponsored by your employer. Your
salary may have been
reduced to pay for these benefits. If you received dependent care benefits, they should be shown in
box 10 of your 2003 Form(s) W-2.
Qualifying Person(s).
A qualifying person is:
- Any child under age 13 whom you can claim as a dependent (but see Exception for children of divorced or separated
parents on this page). If the child turned 13 during the year, the child is a qualifying person for the part of the year he or she
was under age
13.
- Your disabled spouse who is not able to care for himself or herself.
- Any disabled person not able to care for himself or herself whom you can claim as a dependent (or could claim as a dependent
except that the
person had gross income of $3,050 or more). But if this person is your child, see Exception for children of divorced or separated parents
on this page.
To find out who is a dependent, see the instructions for
Form 1040A, line 6c.
To be a qualifying person, the person must have shared the same home with you in 2003.
Exception for children of divorced or separated parents.
If you were divorced, legally separated, or lived apart from the other parent during the last 6 months of
2003, you may be able to take the credit or the exclusion even if your child is not your dependent. If your child is not your
dependent, he or she is
a qualifying person only if all five of the following apply.
- You had custody of the child for a longer time in 2003 than the other parent. See
Pub. 501 for the definition of custody.
- One or both of the parents provided over half of the child's support in 2003.
- One or both of the parents had custody of the child for more than half of 2003.
- The child was under age 13 or was disabled and could not take care of himself or herself.
- The other parent claims the child as a dependent because—
- As the custodial parent, you signed
Form 8332 or a similar statement agreeing not to claim the child's exemption for 2003 or
- Your divorce decree or written agreement went into effect before 1985 and it states that the other parent can claim the child
as a dependent
and the other parent gave at least $600 for the child's support in 2003. But this rule does not apply if your decree or agreement
was changed after
1984 to say that the other parent cannot claim the child as a dependent.
If this exception applies, the other parent cannot treat the child as a qualifying person even though the other parent
claims the child as a
dependent.
Qualified Expenses.
These include amounts paid for household services and care of the qualifying person while you worked or looked for
work. Child support payments are
not qualified expenses. Also, expenses reimbursed by a state social service agency are not qualified expenses unless you
included the reimbursement in your income.
Household services.
These are services needed to care for the qualifying person as well as to run the home. They
include, for example, the services of a cook, maid, babysitter, housekeeper, or cleaning person if the services were partly
for the care of the
qualifying person. Do not include services of a chauffeur or gardener.
You can also include your share of the employment taxes paid on wages for qualifying child and dependent care services.
Care of the qualifying person.
Care includes the cost of services for the qualifying person's well-being and protection. It
does not include the cost of clothing or entertainment.
You can include the cost of care provided outside your home for your dependent under age 13 or any other qualifying
person who regularly spends at
least 8 hours a day in your home. If the care was provided by a dependent care center, the center must meet all applicable
state and local
regulations. A dependent care center is a place that provides care for more than six persons (other than persons who live
there) and receives a fee,
payment, or grant for providing services for any of those persons, even if the center is not run for profit.
You can include amounts paid for items other than the care of your child (such as food and schooling) only if the items are incidental
to the care of the child and cannot be separated from the total cost. But do not include the cost of schooling for a child in the first
grade or above. Also, do not include any expenses for sending your child to an overnight camp.
Medical expenses.
Some disabled spouse and dependent care expenses may qualify as medical expenses if you itemize
deductions. But you must use Form 1040. See
Pub. 503 and
Pub. 502 for details.
Earned Income.
This is the amount shown on
Form 1040A, line 7, minus (a) any amount included for a scholarship or fellowship grant that was not reported to you on a Form W-2 and
(b) any amount received as a pension or annuity from a nonqualified deferred compensation plan or a nongovernmental section 457
plan. This
amount may be reported in
box 11 of your Form W-2. If you received such an amount but box 11 is blank, contact your employer for the amount received
as a pension or
annuity. For purposes of
Part III of Schedule 2, earned income does not include any dependent care benefits shown on
line 12 of Schedule 2. If filing a joint return, figure your and your spouse's earned income separately.
Special situations.
If you are filing a joint return, disregard community property laws. If your spouse died
in 2003 and had no earned income, see
Pub. 503. If your spouse was a student or disabled in 2003, see the
instructions for line 5.
Who Can Take the Credit or Exclude Dependent Care Benefits?
You can take the credit or the exclusion if all six of the following apply.
- Your filing status is single, head of household, qualifying widow(er), or married filing jointly. But see
Married Persons Filing Separate Returns on this page.
- The care was provided so you (and your spouse if you were married) could work or look for work. However, if you did not find
a job and have
no earned income for the year, you cannot take the credit or the exclusion. But if your spouse was a student or disabled,
see the
instructions for line 5.
- You (and your spouse if you were married) paid over half the cost of keeping up your home. The cost includes rent, mortgage
interest, real
estate taxes, utilities, home repairs, insurance on the home, and food eaten at home.
- You and the qualifying person(s) lived in the same home.
- The person who provided the care was not your spouse or a person whom you can claim as a dependent. If your child provided
the care, he or
she must have been age 19 or older by the end of 2003.
- You report the required information about the care provider on
line 1 and, if taking the credit, the information about the qualifying person on
line 2.
Married Persons Filing Separate Returns.
If your filing status is married filing separately and all of the following apply, you are considered unmarried for purposes of
figuring the credit and the exclusion on Schedule 2.
- You lived apart from your spouse during the last 6 months of 2003, and
- The qualifying person lived in your home more than half of 2003, and
- You provided over half the cost of keeping up your home.
If you meet all the requirements to be treated as unmarried and meet items 2 through 6 listed earlier, you can
take the credit or the exclusion. If you do not meet all the requirements to be treated as unmarried, you cannot take the credit. However,
you can take the exclusion if you meet items 2 through 6.
Part I
Persons or Organizations Who Provided the Care
Complete columns (a) through (d) for each person or organization that provided the care. You can use
Form W-10 or any other source listed in its instructions to get the information from the care provider. If you do not give correct
or
complete information, your credit (and exclusion, if applicable) may be disallowed unless you can show you used due diligence
in trying to get the
required information.
Due Diligence.
You can show a serious and earnest effort (due diligence) to get the information by keeping in your records a
Form W-10 completed by the care provider. Or you may keep one of the other sources of information listed in the instructions
for
Form W-10. If the provider does not give you the information, complete the entries you can on
line 1 of
Schedule 2. For example, enter the provider's name and address. Enter “ See Page 2” in the columns for which you do not have the information.
Then, on the bottom of page 2, explain that the provider did not give you the information you asked for.
Columns (a) and (b).
Enter the care provider's name and address. If you were covered by your employer's dependent care plan and your employer
furnished the care (either
at your workplace or by hiring a care provider), enter your employer's name in column (a). Next, enter “ See W-2” in column
(b). Then, leave columns (c) and (d) blank. But if your employer paid a third party (not hired by your employer) on
your behalf to provide the care, you must give information on the third party in columns (a) through (d).
Column (c).
If the care provider is an individual, enter his or her social security number (SSN). Otherwise, enter the provider's
employer identification
number (EIN). If the provider is a tax-exempt organization, enter “ Tax-Exempt.”
Column (d).
Enter the total amount you actually paid in 2003 to the care provider. Also, include amounts your employer paid to a third party on your
behalf. It does not matter when the expenses were incurred. Do not reduce this amount by any reimbursement you received.
Part II
Credit for Child and Dependent Care Expenses
Complete columns (a) through (c) for each qualifying person. If you have more than two qualifying persons, attach
a statement to your return with the required information. Be sure to put your name and social security number (SSN) on the
statement. Also, enter
“See Attached” in the space to the left of
line 3.
Column (a).
Enter each qualifying person's name.
Column (b).
You must enter the qualifying person's SSN. Be sure the name and SSN entered agree with the person's social security card. Otherwise,
at
the time we process your return, we may reduce or disallow your credit. If the person was born and died in 2003 and did not
have an SSN, enter
“ Died” in column (b) and attach a copy of the person's birth certificate. To find out how to get an SSN, see
Social Security Number (SSN) on page 20 of the Form 1040A instructions. If the name or SSN on the person's social security card is not
correct, call the Social Security Administration at
1-800-772-1213.
Column (c).
Enter the qualified expenses you incurred and paid in 2003 for the person listed in column (a). Prepaid expenses are treated as paid in
the year the care is provided. Do not include in column (c) qualified expenses:
- You incurred in 2003 but did not pay until 2004. You may be able to use these expenses to increase your 2004 credit.
- You incurred in 2002 but did not pay until 2003. Instead, see the instructions for line 9.
- You prepaid in 2003 for care to be provided in 2004. These expenses can only be used to figure your 2004 credit.
If you paid qualified expenses for the care of two or more qualifying persons, the $6,000 limit does not need to be
divided equally. For example,
if you incurred and paid $2,500 of qualifying expenses for the care of one qualifying person and $3,500 for the care of another
qualifying person, you
can use the total, $6,000, to figure the credit.
Spouse Who Was a Student or Disabled.
Your spouse was a student if he or she was enrolled as a full-time student at a school during any 5 months of 2003. A school does not
include a night school or correspondence school. Your spouse was disabled if he or she was not capable of self-care. Figure your spouse's
earned income on a monthly basis.
For each month or part of a month your spouse was a student or disabled, he or she is considered to have worked and
earned income. His or her
earned income for each month is considered to be at least $250 ($500 if more than one qualifying person was cared for in 2003).
If your spouse also
worked during that month, use the higher of $250 (or $500) or his or her actual earned income for that month. If, in the same
month, both you and your
spouse were either students or disabled, only one of you can be treated as having earned income in that month.
For any month that your spouse was not a student or disabled, use your spouse's actual earned income if he or she
worked during the month.
Credit for Prior Year's Expenses.
If you had qualified expenses for 2002 that you did not pay until 2003, you may be able to increase the amount of
your 2003 credit. To figure the
credit, see the worksheet under Amount of Credit in
Pub. 503. If you can take a credit for your 2002 expenses, enter the amount of the credit and “ CPYE” in the space to the left of line 9.
Also, enter the name and social security number of the person for whom you paid the prior year's expenses next to this amount.
Then, add the credit to
the amount on line 9 and replace the amount on line 9 with that total. Also, attach a statement showing how you figured the
credit.
Part III
Dependent Care Benefits
If you had a flexible spending account, any amount included on line 12 that you did not receive because you did not incur
the expense is considered
forfeited. Enter the forfeited amount on line 13. Do not include amounts you expect to receive at a future date.
Example.
Under your employer's dependent care plan, you chose to have your employer set aside $5,000 to cover your 2003 dependent
care expenses. The $5,000
is shown in
box 10 of your Form W-2. In 2003, you incurred and were reimbursed for $4,950 of qualified expenses. You would enter $5,000
on line 12 and $50,
the amount forfeited, on line 13.
Enter the total of all qualified expenses incurred in 2003 for the care of your qualifying person(s). It does not matter when
the expenses were
paid.
Example.
You received $2,000 in cash under your employer's dependent care plan for 2003. The $2,000 is shown in
box 10 of your Form W-2. Only $900 of qualified expenses were incurred in 2003 for the care of your 5-year-old dependent child.
You would enter
$2,000 on
line 12 and $900 on
line 15.
If your filing status is married filing separately, see
Married Persons Filing Separate Returns on page 2. Are you considered unmarried under that rule?
□ |
Yes. |
Enter your earned income (from
line 17) on
line 18. On
line 20, enter the smaller of the amount from
line 19 or $5,000.
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□ |
No. |
Enter your spouse's earned income on
line 18. If your spouse was a student or disabled in 2003, see the
instructions for line 5. On
line 20, enter the smaller of the amount from
line 19 or $2,500.
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