Money
Management
Money
Management is a weekly column on personal finance prepared
and distributed by certified public accountants.
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 18, 2002
TAX
BREAKS FOR SUPPORTING ELDERLY PARENTS
Supporting
elderly parents can be rewarding, but also financially draining.
The New York State Society of CPAs points out that qualified
taxpayers can get some assistance from Uncle Sam. Individuals
who provide financial support for their parents may qualify
for a dependency exemption on their tax returns. In addition,
they may qualify for a medical expense deduction as well as
a credit for dependent care expenses.
UNDERSTANDING
DEPENDENCY
Although
most filers are familiar with claiming dependency exemptions
for themselves, their spouses, and their children, fewer are
aware of the tax rules governing dependency exemptions for
a parent or other relative. Under current tax law, if you
provide more than half the costs of supporting a parent or
other qualified relative, you may be entitled to a dependency
exemption. Support includes food, lodging, clothing, transportation,
recreation, medical and dental care, and similar necessities.
QUALIFYING
FOR THE DEDUCTION
The
parent or relative must be a U.S. citizen, or a resident of
the U.S., Canada, or Mexico. Your parent need not live with
you to qualify as a dependent. Certain relatives, however,
must reside with you in order for you to take a dependency
exemption. The dependent must not file a joint return with
anyone, unless the return is filed only to receive a refund
for taxes paid. Furthermore, the dependent's gross income
must be less than the personal exemption amount which is $2,900
for 2001 (this does not apply to your children who are less
than age 19 or to full-time students under age 24). Tax-exempt
income doesn't count toward the personal exemption amount,
nor does the tax-exempt part of Social Security.
MAKING
THE MOST OF THE DEPENDENCY EXEMPTION
The
dependent's own funds are not considered support unless they
are actually used for support. For example, let's suppose
that, over the course of the year, your mother receives $4,800
in Social Security and $200 in interest. Of this $5,000, she
spends $4,000 for her support and saves the remaining $1,000.
If you spend more than $4,000 for her support, you can claim
her as a dependent even though she contributed more money.
Unless
you specify otherwise, the IRS routinely allocates your contribution
of support equally between both parents. If you provide less
than half of the total support for both parents, you might
consider supporting only one of them, the one with less income.
By making your check payable only to that parent, you may
become eligible to claim at least one parent as a dependent.
Finally,
to protect your dependency exemption, add up the numbers well
before the end of the year. That way, if you discover you're
short of providing more than half of your parent's support,
you may be able to claim the exemption by spending an additional
sum before year end.
FILING
A MULTIPLE SUPPORT AGREEMENT
In some cases, several siblings join together to support an
elderly parent. If you and your siblings together contribute
more than half your parent's support, but no one of you provides
more than 50% of that support, you can file a multiple support
agreement. A multiple support agreement allows any one of
you who furnished over 10% of the dependent's support to claim
the one available exemption, if the others agree. Each contributor
signs a form 2120 and attaches the form to his/her tax return.
The person who claims the exemption can alternate from year
to year.
DEDUCTING
MEDICAL EXPENSES
If you pay more than half your parent's support, you may be
able to deduct any medical expenses you pay on his or her
behalf, even if your parent earned too much for you to claim
a dependency exemption. You may add your parent's qualifying
medical expenses (including health insurance premiums) to
your own medical expenses and deduct the expenses which exceed
7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income (AGI).
QUALIFYING
FOR THE DEPENDENT CARE CREDIT
A
dependent care tax credit is available for individuals who,
in order to be able to work, pay someone to care for a mentally
or physically disabled parent. The credit is a percentage,
based on your AGI, of the amount of dependent care expenses
you pay. Expenses for care of a disabled dependent also may
qualify for a medical deduction. You must choose to take either
the itemized deduction or the dependent care credit, but not
both.
If you have questions regarding dependency exemptions, deductions
or the dependent care credit, you can consult a CPA.
PUBLIC
SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT
TAX BREAKS FOR SUPPORTING ELDERLY PARENTS
If
you provided more than half the support for a parent last
year, you may be entitled to a dependency exemption on your
2001 tax return, explains the New York State Society of CPAs.
Support includes food, lodging, clothing, transportation,
recreation, medical and dental care, and similar necessities.
Your parent must not file a joint return with anyone - unless
the return is filed only to receive a refund for taxes paid
- and his or her gross income must be less than the personal
exemption amount for the year, which is $2,900 for 2001. To
claim the dependency exemption, your parent need not live
with you, but he or she must be a U.S. citizen or a resident
of the U.S., Canada or Mexico.