CARL WATTS & ASSOCIATES
April 2nd, 2012
Washington DC
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tel/fax 202 350-9002 |
The Child Tax Credit (CTC) is a popular federal tax credit for families raising children.
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The CTC is actually the largest tax code provision benefiting families with children. Just for 2011 only, it is estimated that 35 million families will claim credits totaling about $50 billion.
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Up until 2001 the CTC was $500 per child. The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 doubled the CTC amount to $1,000 per child, made it refundable for more families and allowed it regardless of AMT liability.
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The Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization and Job Creation Act of 2010 extended those temporary provisions through 2012. Barring further extension, the CTC will revert to $500 per child in 2013.
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The Child Tax Credit is available to eligible taxpayers with qualifying children.
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A qualifying child for this credit is a child who meets the qualifying criteria of seven tests: age, relationship, support, dependent, joint return, citizenship and residence.
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Age test:
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Relationship test:
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Support test:
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Dependent test:
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Joint return test:
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Citizenship test:
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Residence test:
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An eligible taxpayer for the CTC must, of course, have qualifying children and a certain income level, or, to be more exact, a certain modified adjusted gross income.
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The CTC, like other credits, is gradually reduced based on a person's income for the year. The child tax credit starts to be reduced when income reaches the following levels:
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In the phaseout range, the child tax credit is reduced by $50 for each $1,000 of income above these threshold amounts. These phaseout ranges are set by statute and not indexed annually for inflation.
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In addition, the CTC is generally limited by the amount of the income tax and any alternative minimum tax you owe.
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The only CTC parameter indexed to inflation is the threshold over which families may receive a refundable credit. As the nominal threshold rises, families must earn more each year to receive the same refundable credit. This situation only affects families who do not have enough tax liability to get the entire $1,000 per child credit.
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For some taxpayers, utilizing the child tax credit can reduce their federal income tax liability to zero. In that situation, any excess or remaining child tax credits may be refundable to the taxpayer.
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This is called the Additional Child Tax Credit. The refundable portion of the credit has two different methods of calculation depending on the number of children the taxpayer is claiming.
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For taxpayers with one or two children, the refundable portion of the child tax credit is the smaller of the unused portion of the child tax credit or 15 percent of the person's earned income over $3,000.
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For taxpayers with three or more children, the refundable portion of the CTC is the smaller of the unused portion of the child tax credit, or the larger of either 15% of the earned income over $3,000, or the sum of Social Security and Medicare taxes paid minus the earned income credit.
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A military taxpayer’s nontaxable combat pay may be added to the earned income which may result in a larger credit.
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You can claim the Child Tax Credit on your 1040 form.
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The Additional Child Tax Credit is claimed using Form 8812 that you must file together with your tax return.
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Tax credits are taken in a certain order and it is useful to note that the Child and Dependent Care Credit and the Adoption Credit are taken before the CTC.
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Professional help in planning ahead and calculating which credit serves you better is certainly recommendable.
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