Adoption Credits

February 16, 2008 at 7:56 pm (Deductions, tax advocacy, tax debt help, tax help, Tax Preparation) (, , , , )

  • Claim the Adoption Credit or exclude up to $11,390 for qualifying adoption expenses.

  • Qualified expenses include adoption fees, court costs, attorney fees and travel expenses.
  • Claim the credit the year after you pay expenses or the year the adoption is final, whichever comes first.

You may be able to take a tax credit for qualifying expenses paid to adopt an eligible child. First, check with your employer about assistance, because some companies offer a program to get back a portion of adoption expenses. The Adoption Credit is not available for any reimbursed expense, but certain amounts reimbursed by your employer for qualifying adoption expenses may be excluded from your gross income.

How does it work?

The Adoption Credit could reduce your tax liability by as much as $11,390 for any type of adoption. You may claim both a credit and an exclusion for the expenses of adopting an eligible child. In other words, you may be able to claim a credit of up to $11,390 and also exclude up to $11,390 from your income. However, you can’t claim both a credit and an exclusion for the same expense.

To qualify for the full credit:

  • Your adjusted gross income must be less than $170,820.
  • The Adoption Credit or exclusion must be taken for a child who is a U.S. citizen or resident, unless the adoption of a foreign non-resident child becomes final.
  • You must adopt an eligible child.

Or

  • The child must have special needs.
  • The child must be a U.S. citizen or resident.
  • A state has determined that the child can’t or shouldn’t be returned to their parents’ home and probably won’t be adopted unless assistance is provided.

The credit and exclusion are reduced if your modified adjusted gross income is between $170,820 and $210,820. You can’t claim either the credit or the exclusion if your modified adjusted gross income is $210,820 or more.

If you’re adopting a special needs child, you can claim the full credit regardless of the amount spent on adoption expenses.

Is my child eligible?

An eligible child is one who is either younger than 18 or physically or mentally incapable of self care. A special needs child must have been a U.S. citizen or resident at the time the adoption procedure began, a state must have determined that the child shouldn’t be returned to his or her parents’ home, and the state must have determined that the child will not be adopted without assistance from the state. States make this determination based on a variety of factors that include:

  • the child’s ethnic background
  • the child’s age
  • the child’s minority status
  • whether the child has siblings
  • whether the child has a chronic medical condition
  • whether the child has an emotional or physical handicap

Which adoption expenses qualify?

Adoption expenses covered by the credit include:

  • all adoption fees
  • court costs
  • attorney fees
  • travel expenses (including meals and lodging while away from home)
  • other expenses directly related to the legal adoption of an eligible child

What expenses don’t qualify?

There are several adoption-related expenses that are not eligible for the credit. Some of these include:

  • expenses that violate state or federal law
  • expenses associated with surrogate parenting arrangements
  • expenses associated with the adoption of your spouse’s child
  • expenses paid with funds received from any government program
  • expenses allowed as a credit or deduction under any other federal income tax provision
  • expenses paid or reimbursed by an employer or someone else

When do I claim this credit?

If you’re adopting a U.S. child, you claim the tax credit in the year after you incur the expense or the year the adoption becomes final, whichever comes first. For example, if you pay for a home study in 2006 but your adoption isn’t finalized until 2007, you claim the Adoption Credit in 2007. The credit for expenses you pay in a year after the adoption is final is claimed in the year the expenses were paid.

In the case of a U.S. child, you can claim the credit even if your adoption of the child fails. However, if your adoption involves a foreign child, you can take the credit only if the adoption is completed.

You may claim the credit for more than 1 year. For example, assume you spent $500 in 2005 for a home study to adopt a U.S. child, then an additional $3,000 in court costs and adoption agency fees in 2006. If the adoption wasn’t finalized until 2007, you would claim a $500 credit in 2006 and a $3,000 Adoption Credit in 2007. If the adoption became final in 2006, you would have taken the entire $3,500 credit in 2006. But again, for foreign children, no credit may be taken until, and only if, the adoption is finalized.

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Employee Fringe Benefits

February 16, 2008 at 1:20 am (Deductions, tax advocacy, tax debt help, tax help, Tax Preparation) (, , , )

Fringe benefits are benefits over and above your salary provided by your employer. They include accident and health plans or group-term life insurance.

The Tax Benefit

A fringe benefit that meets specified conditions may be fully or partially nontaxable if it meets IRS requirements even if your employer pays the entire amount. Even if the value of a fringe benefit is included in your taxable income, you still come out ahead.

For example, if your company has a resort you can use free of charge, you must include the fair market value of the accommodations in your taxable income. Your employer usually figures the taxable amount. If the value is set at $1,000 for your 2-week stay, then $1,000 will be included in your taxable wages.

If you had to pay the $1,000 out of pocket, it would really cost you more because you’d be spending after-tax dollars. In the 25% bracket you must earn $1,333 to have $1,000 left after taxes.

Common Employee Benefits
  • Health Savings Accounts & Cafeteria Plans

  • Child Care Expenses

  • Driving a Company-provided Car

  • De Minimis Fringe Benefits

  • Educational Assistance

  • Employee Discounts for Property or Services

  • Employee Stock Purchase Plans

  • Free Parking

  • Group-term Life Insurance

  • Incentive Stock Options

  • Interest-free or Bargain-rate Loans

  • Meals & Lodging

  • Medical & Dental Coverage

  • No-cost Services

  • Outplacement Services

  • Employer-provided Retirement Plans

  • Stock Bonuses or Bargain Purchases

  • Transit Passes

  • Working-condition Fringe Benefits

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Taxing Those Generous Gifts

February 16, 2008 at 1:12 am (tax advocacy, tax debt help, tax help, Tax Preparation) (, , , )

  • Gifts that aren’t taxable include tuition, medical expenses, gifts to your spouse, gifts to a political organization and charitable donations.
  • Estate tax may be applied to your taxable estate at your death.
  • You could pay lower taxes on appreciated securities by giving them to your child.

If you gave someone gifts valued more than $12,000, you must report the total gift to the IRS and may have to pay tax on the gifts. If you’re Married Filing Jointly, the tax-free amount doubles to $24,000. If you or your spouse make a gift to a third party, the gift can be considered as made half by you and half by your spouse (known as gift splitting).The person who receives your gift doesn’t have to report it to the IRS or pay gift or income tax on its value.

Taxable Gifts

Gifts include money and property, including the use of property without expecting to receive something of equal value in return. If you sell something at less than its value or make an interest-free or reduced-interest loan, you may be making a gift. There are some exceptions to the tax rules on gifts. The following gifts don’t count against the annual limit:

  • tuition or medical expenses you pay directly to an educational or medical institution for someone’s benefit
  • gifts to your spouse
  • gifts to a political organization
  • charitable donations

Estate Tax

The money and property you own when you die (your estate) may be subject to federal estate tax if the estate is worth more than the applicable exclusion amount.

Most relatively simple estates (cash, publicly traded securities, small amounts of other, easily valued assets, and no special deductions or elections or jointly held property) with a total value under $2 million and a date of death in 2006 or 2007 do not require the filing of an estate tax return.

Additionally, the person who receives your estate generally won’t have to pay an estate tax or an income tax on the value of the inheritance.

Reduced Tax on Appreciated Securities

If you give your child appreciated securities (such as stock or mutual fund shares), the tax bill on the increase in value is passed on to the child along with the gift.

For example, stock you bought for $2,500 is now worth $5,000. If you sold the stock, you’d owe tax on the $2,500 gain. The 15% rate on long-term capital gains means it would cost you $375.

If you gave the shares to your child, the same $2,500 would be taxed, but at your child’s rate. His or her income may be low enough to allow him or her to be taxed at the 5% long-term capital gains rate. If that’s the case, the tax bill would be reduced to $125.

S. Raines, Sr. Financial Advisor/Tax Preparer

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