This credit is available to individuals who are either age 65 or older
or are under age 65 and retired on permanent and total disability. Generally,
you must be a United States citizen or resident to take the credit. You must
also have adjusted gross income and nontaxable social security or other nontaxable
pensions that are less than the amounts shown in the Form 1040, Schedule R Instructions, Form 1040A, Schedule 3 Instructions,
or in Publication 524, Credit for the Elderly or the Disabled.
To claim the credit if you are under age 65 and retired on permanent and
total disability, you must receive taxable disability income and not yet have
reached the age when your employer's retirement program would have required
you to retire. Taxable disability income is defined as "wages or payments
in lieu of wages for the period during which the individual is absent from
work on account of permanent and total disability."
Use Form 1040 Schedule R or Form 1040A Schedule 3 to
compute the credit. You cannot take the credit if you file Form 1040EZ.
Generally, if you are married at the end of the year, you and your spouse
must file a joint return to claim this credit. However, you may be able to
claim the credit on a separate return if you and your spouse lived apart for
the entire year. If your filing status is head of household, you may be able
to claim the credit even if your spouse lived with you during the first 6
months of the year.