Table of Contents
Increase in age of children whose investment income is taxed at parent's rate. The investment income of certain children under age 18 at the end of the year continues to be taxed at the parent's tax rate. But this rule now also applies in certain cases to a child who either:
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Was age 18 at the end of the year and did not have earned income that was more than half of the child's support, or
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Was a full-time student over age 18 and under age 24 at the end of the year and did not have earned income that was more than half of the child's support.
This chapter discusses the following two rules that may affect the tax on investment income of certain children.
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If the child's interest and dividend income (including capital gain distributions) total less than $9,000, the child's parent may be able to choose to include that income on the parent's return rather than file a return for the child. (See Parent's Election To Report Child's Interest and Dividends, later.)
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If the child's interest, dividends, and other investment income total more than $1,800, part of that income may be taxed at the parent's tax rate instead of the child's tax rate. (See Tax for Certain Children Who Have Investment Income of More Than $1,800, later.)
For these rules, the term “child” includes a legally adopted child and a stepchild. These rules apply whether or not the child is a dependent.
Publication
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929 Tax Rules for Children and Dependents
Form (and Instructions)
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8615 Tax for Certain Children Who Have Investment Income of More Than $1,800
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8814 Parents' Election To Report Child's Interest and Dividends
If a child's parents are married to each other and file a joint return, use the joint return to figure the tax on the child's investment income. The tax rate and other return information from that return are used to figure the child's tax as explained later under Tax for Certain Children Who Have Investment Income of More Than $1,800.
For parents who do not file a joint return, the following discussions explain which parent's tax return must be used to figure the tax.
Only the parent whose tax return is used can make the election described under Parent's Election To Report Child's Interest and Dividends.
You may be able to elect to include your child's interest and dividend income (including capital gain distributions) on your tax return. If you do, your child will not have to file a return.
You can make this election only if all the following conditions are met.
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Your child was under age 19 (or under age 24 if a full-time student) at the end of the year.
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Your child had income only from interest and dividends (including capital gain distributions and Alaska Permanent Fund dividends).
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The child's gross income was less than $9,000.
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The child is required to file a return unless you make this election.
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The child does not file a joint return for the year.
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No estimated tax payment was made for the year, and no overpayment from the previous year was applied to this year under your child's name and social security number.
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No federal income tax was taken out of your child's income under the backup withholding rules.
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You are the parent whose return must be used when applying the special tax rules for children. (See Which Parent's Return To Use, earlier.)
These conditions are also shown in Figure 31-A.
The federal income tax on your child's income may be more if you make the Form 8814 election.
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The additional standard deduction for a blind child.
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The deduction for a penalty on an early withdrawal of your child's savings.
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Itemized deductions (such as your child's investment expenses or charitable contributions).
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Deduction for contributions to a traditional individual retirement arrangement (IRA).
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Deduction for student loan interest.
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Itemized deductions for medical expenses, casualty and theft losses, and certain miscellaneous expenses.
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Total itemized deductions.
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Personal exemptions.
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Credit for child and dependent care expenses.
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Child tax credit.
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Education tax credits.
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Earned income credit.
Use Form 8814, Part I, to figure your child's interest and dividend income to report on your return. Only the amount over $1,800 is added to your income. The amount over $1,800 is shown on Form 8814, line 6. Unless the child's income includes qualified dividends or capital gain distributions (discussed next), the same amount is shown on Form 8814, line 12. Include the amount from Form 8814, line 12, on Form 1040, line 21. Enter “Form 8814” on the dotted line next to line 21. If you file more than one Form 8814, include the total amounts from line 12 of all your Forms 8814 on Form 1040, line 21.
Use Form 8814, Part II, to figure the tax on the $1,800 of your child's interest and dividends that you do not include in your income. This tax is added to the tax figured on your income.
This additional tax is the smaller of:
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10% × (your child's gross income − $900), or
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$90.
Include the amount from line 15 of all your Forms 8814 in the total on Form 1040, line 44. Check box a on Form 1040, line 44.
David and Linda Parks are married and will file separate tax returns for 2008. Their only child, Philip, is 8. Philip received a Form 1099-INT showing $1,650 taxable interest income and a Form 1099-DIV showing $1,150 ordinary dividends. All the dividends were qualified dividends. His parents decide to include that income on one of their returns so they will not have to file a return for Philip.
First, David and Linda each figure their taxable income (Form 1040, line 43) without regard to Philip's income. David's taxable income is $56,700 and Linda's is $74,300. Because her taxable income is greater, Linda can elect to include Philip's income on her return. See Which Parent's Return To Use, earlier.
On Form 8814 (see illustrated form), Linda enters her name and social security number, then Philip's name and social security number. She enters Philip's taxable interest income, $1,650, on line 1a. Philip had no tax-exempt interest income, so she leaves line 1b blank. She enters Philip's ordinary dividends, $1,150, on line 2a. All of Philip's ordinary dividends were qualified dividends, so Linda also enters $1,150 on line 2b. Philip did not have any capital gain distributions, so she leaves line 3 blank.
Linda adds lines 1a and 2a and enters the result, $2,800, on line 4. Because Philip had qualified dividends, Linda must complete lines 7 through 11 of Form 8814. She includes the amount from line 9 of Form 8814 ($411) on lines 9a and 9b of her Form 1040. On the dotted lines next to lines 9a and 9b, she enters “Form 8814–$411.”
Linda includes $589 in the total on line 21 of her Form 1040 (not illustrated) and in the space next to that line writes “Form 8814–$589.” Adding that amount, plus the $411 of qualified dividends, to her income increases each of the amounts on lines 22, 37, 38, 41, and 43 of her Form 1040 by $1,000. Linda is not claiming any deductions that are affected by the increase to her income. Therefore, her revised taxable income on line 43 is $75,300 ($74,300 + $411 + $589).
On Form 8814, Linda subtracts the $900 shown on line 13 from the $2,800 on line 4 and enters the result, $1,900, on line 14. Because that amount is not less than $900, she enters $90 on line 15. This is the tax on the first $1,800 of Philip's income, which Linda did not have to add to her income. She must add this additional tax to the tax figured on her revised taxable income.
The tax on her $75,300 revised taxable income, figured using the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet in the Form 1040 instructions, is $15,399. She adds $90, and enters the $15,489 total on Form 1040, line 44, and checks box a.
Linda attaches Form 8814 to her Form 1040.
If a child's interest, dividends, and other investment income total more than $1,800, part of that income may be taxed at the parent's tax rate instead of the child's tax rate. If the parent does not or cannot choose to include the child's income on the parent's return, use Form 8615 to figure the child's tax. Attach the completed form to the child's Form 1040 or Form 1040A.
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The child's investment income was more than $1,800.
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The child is required to file a return for 2008.
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The child either:
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Was under age 18 at the end of the year,
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Was age 18 at the end of the year and did not have earned income that was more than half of his or her support, or
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Was a full-time student over age 18 and under age 24 at the end of the year and did not have earned income that was more than half of his or her support.
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At least one of the child's parents was alive at the end of 2008.
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The child does not file a joint return for 2008.
31-B.
IF a child was born on | THEN, at the end of 2008, the child is considered to be |
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January 1, 1991 | 18* |
January 1, 1990 | 19** |
January 1, 1985 | 24*** |
*This child is not under age 18. The child meets condition 3 only if the child did not have earned income that was more than half of the child's support. **This child meets condition 3 only if the child was a full-time student who did not have earned income that was more than half of the child's support. ***Do not use Form 8615 for this child. |
On Form 8615, lines A and B, enter the parent's name and social security number. (If the parents filed a joint return, enter the name and social security number listed first on the joint return.) On line C, check the box for the parent's filing status.
See Which Parent's Return To Use at the beginning of this chapter for information on which parent's return information must be used on Form 8615.
The first step in figuring a child's tax using Form 8615 is to figure the child's net investment income. To do that, use Form 8615, Part I.
Example.
Amanda Black, age 13, received the following income.
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Dividends — $600
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Wages — $2,100
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Taxable interest — $1,200
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Tax-exempt interest — $100
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Net capital gains — $100
The dividends were qualified dividends on stock given to her by her grandparents.
Amanda's investment income is $1,900. This is the total of the dividends ($600), taxable interest ($1,200), and net capital gains ($100). Her wages are earned (not investment) income because they are received for work actually done. Her tax-exempt interest is not included because it is nontaxable.
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$900 plus the portion of the child's itemized deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 29, that are directly connected with the production of investment income entered on line 1, or
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$1,800.
Example 1.
Roger, age 12, has investment income of $8,000, no other income, no adjustments to income, and itemized deductions of $300 (net of the 2% limit) that are directly connected with his investment income. His adjusted gross income is $8,000, which is entered on Form 1040, line 38, and on Form 8615, line 1. Line 2 is $1,800 because that is more than the sum of $900 and his directly-connected itemized deductions of $300.
Example 2.
Eleanor, age 8, has investment income of $16,000 and an early withdrawal penalty of $100. She has no other income. She has itemized deductions of $1,050 (net of the 2% limit) that are directly connected with the production of her investment income. Her adjusted gross income, entered on line 1, is $15,900 ($16,000 − $100). The amount on line 2 is $1,950. This is the larger of:
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$900 plus the $1,050 of directly connected itemized deductions, or
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$1,800.
The next step in completing Form 8615 is to figure a tentative tax on the child's net investment income at the parent's tax rate. The tentative tax at the parent's tax rate is the difference between the tax on the parent's taxable income figured with the child's net investment income (plus the net investment income of any other child whose Form 8615 includes the tax return information of that parent) and the tax figured without it.
When figuring the tentative tax at the parent's tax rate, do not refigure any of the exclusions, deductions, or credits on the parent's return because of the child's net investment income. For example, do not refigure the medical expense deduction.
Figure the tentative tax on Form 8615, lines 6 through 13.
Note.
If the child has any capital gains or losses, get Publication 929 for help in completing Form 8615, Part II.
Example.
Paul and Jane Persimmon have three children, Sharon, Jerry, and Mike, who must attach Form 8615 to their tax returns. The children's net investment income amounts on line 5 of their Forms 8615 are:
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Sharon — $800
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Jerry — $600
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Mike — $1,000
Line 7 of Sharon's Form 8615 will show $1,600, the total of the amounts on line 5 of Jerry's and Mike's Forms 8615.
Line 7 of Jerry's Form 8615 will show $1,800 ($800 + $1,000).
Line 7 of Mike's Form 8615 will show $1,400 ($800 + $600).
Example.
In the earlier example under Line 7 (net investment income of other children), Sharon's Form 8615 shows $1,600 on line 7. The amount entered on line 12a is $2,400, the total of the amounts on lines 5 and 7 ($800 + $1,600). The decimal on line 12b is .333, figured as follows and rounded to three places.
$800 | = | .333 | ||
$2,400 |
The final step in figuring a child's tax using Form 8615 is to determine the larger of:
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The total of:
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The child's share of the tentative tax based on the parent's tax rate, plus
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The tax on the child's taxable income in excess of net investment income, figured at the child's tax rate, or
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The tax on the child's taxable income, figured at the child's tax rate.
This is the child's tax. It is figured on Form 8615, lines 14 through 18.
The following example includes a completed Form 8615. Form 1040A is not shown.
John and Laura Brown have one child, Sara. She is 13 and has $2,800 taxable interest income and $1,500 earned income. She does not itemize deductions. John and Laura file a joint return with John's name and social security number listed first. They claim three exemptions, including an exemption for Sara, on their return.
Because Sara is under age 18 and has more than $1,800 investment income, part of her income may be subject to tax at her parents' rate. A completed Form 8615 must be attached to her return.
Sara's father, John, fills out Sara's return for her. He completes her Form 1040A through line 27, then begins completing her Form 8615.
John enters his name and social security number on Sara's Form 8615 because his name and number are listed first on the joint return he and Laura are filing. He checks the box for married filing jointly.
He enters Sara's investment income, $2,800, on line 1. Sara does not itemize deductions, so John enters $1,800 on line 2. He enters $1,000 ($2,800 − $1,800) on line 3.
Sara's taxable income on her Form 1040A, line 27, is $2,500. This is her total income ($4,300) minus her standard deduction ($1,800). Her standard deduction is limited to the amount of her earned income plus $300. John enters $2,500 on line 4.
John compares lines 3 and 4 and enters the smaller amount, $1,000, on line 5.
John enters $48,000 on line 6. This is the taxable income from line 43 of John and Laura's joint Form 1040 return. Sara is an only child, so line 7 is blank. He adds line 5 ($1,000), line 6 ($48,000), and line 7 (blank), and enters $49,000 on line 8.
Using the column for married filing jointly in the Tax Table, John finds the tax on $49,000. He enters the tax, $6,551, on line 9. He enters $6,401 on line 10. This is the tax from line 44 of John and Laura's Form 1040. He enters $150 on line 11 ($6,551 − $6,401).
Because line 7 is blank, John skips lines 12a and 12b and enters $150 on line 13.
John subtracts line 5 ($1,000) from line 4 ($2,500) and enters the result, $1,500, on line 14. Using the column for single filing status in the Tax Table, John finds the tax on $1,500 and enters this tax, $151, on line 15. He adds lines 13 ($150) and 15 ($151) and enters $301 on line 16.
Using the column for single filing status in the Tax Table, John finds the tax on $2,500 (line 4) and enters this tax, $251, on line 17.
John compares lines 16 and 17 and enters the larger amount, $301, on line 18 of Sara's Form 8615. He also enters that amount on line 28 of Sara's Form 1040A.
John also completes Schedule 1 (Form 1040A) for Sara.
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