If my older daughter file my son on her income taxes, should I be entitled to all monies she got from the child.?

2016-02-03 8:49 pm

回答 (10)

2016-02-03 10:24 pm
✔ 最佳答案
If you allowed her to claim him then legally no, you get none of it. If you supported him you would need to claim him.
2016-02-04 1:30 am
No. If the child is her dependent then she should get the money to help her provide for the child.

If the child is really your dependent then you are both cheating on your taxes and that is illegal.
2016-02-04 1:54 am
No, if she's legally entitled to claim him, the refund is hers not yours.
2016-02-03 9:16 pm
No.

Your share of your daughter's tax refund is exactly $0.00

If all live together and both you and your older daughter meet the requirements to claim the younger child then you are free to choose between yourselves who will claim him. That agreement can come with a verbal deal on how you're going to divide the money, but legally it belongs to the taxpayer who claimed the child and nobody is going to try to enforce your verbal agreement.

Keep in mind that if you both attempt to claim your son, you will automatically win based on the IRS tiebreaker rules. The first tiebreaker is that a parent always wins over a non-parent, which means Mom wins over the dependent's big sister.
2016-02-05 2:26 pm
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2016-02-03 11:35 pm
absolutely not
first of all unless she is qualified to claim him she can't, and even if she were eligible to claim him none of any of her refund money would belong to you, all the refund is hers
2016-02-03 9:01 pm
No, you'd be entitled to none.
2016-02-03 8:58 pm
No.

And by the way, your daughter can only file your son if a) she lived with him for more than half the year; b) she is older than him; c) her AGI is higher than your AGI.

The IRS really expects you to file him on your return.
2016-02-03 8:49 pm
no
2016-02-03 9:07 pm
No.

And if she can legitimately claim him as a dependent, she isn't "getting" any money for him. The IRS simply reduces the amount of tax she owes because she is caring for a dependent.


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