Taxes Questions and Answers

What happen when ex doesn't capture written approval from custodial parent for toll return?

My daughter lives with me 11 mths out of the year, her father pays child support. I am on SSI and dont wallet taxes as I do not work. There is nothing surrounded by our divorce about Taxes but recognize he should have be asking me for a form to sign. Is this right?He hasn't. Unless he has be having someone else sign my term on it. What are my rights?


Answers: You have the right to claim your daughter as a dependent provided she's lower than 19 years old (or 24 and a full-time student). She lived near you more than 6 months and presumably did not pay more than partly of her own support. She's your qualifying child and not a soul elses.

Your ex-spouse could claim her as a qualifying relative IF you released the exemption to him on a Form 8332 or similar stmt. This release can be for one year, for more than one year, or for adjectives future years.

If you've not released the exemption (and the divorce decreee does not provide him that right), he ought not be using your daughter as his dependent.

Your question doesn't specifically indicate that you know he have used her on his return. If you're not sure, there's nothing wrong next to asking him directly before reporting him to the IRS.
You should hold the right to claim your daughter. Does he pay alimony to you? Alimony is taxable to you so if he pays it after you should be filing a import tax return.

You could always be nice and consent to him claim your daughter since he actually pays taxes. And yes in attendance is a form to sign in lay down for you to let him claim your daughter.
Contact the IRS, and they will provide you beside the forms, to have an investigation done to see if he have claimed the daughter.

If he pays child support he should be able to dedust that amount depending on how he files.
To own claimed his child without your written blessing he would have have to have told the IRS he be the custodial parent or she was his qualify relative. There is a form the custodial parent can sign if they want to give the noncustodial parent the right to claim the child as an exemption and for the child import tax credit. They would not get EIC or dependent caution credit for the child and the custodial parent could still get these credits if they are required to folder a return

If he used her as his qualifing child he had to speak about the IRS she was living near him for more than six months out of the tax year.

If he used her as his qualify relative he had to report to the IRS if was paying more than partially of her support.

If neither of the above statements are true he should not have claimed her.

If she is living beside you and no one else provided over partly of her support and you do not file taxes not a soul should be claiming the child.
You are the only parent eligible to claim your daughter as a dependent since you lived together for more than 1/2 of the year. The custodial parent within a divorce situation is decided by whom the child resided for the longer extent of time during the taxable year. Since your are the custodial parent, you can release your claim to the dependency exemption but in lay down to do this, you need to sign a written testimony that your ex will need to attach to his export tax return.

Does anyone think through the NIC payments on a P60?

hello all,

Am finally making a solid effort to figure out all my PAYE and NIC payments, but am really confused by the NIC payments on my finishing P60 - does anyone understand this?

Say, I earn 30,000 to April 2007, looking at NIC tables, tell me the LEL is lb4368, but that I start paying NICs at 11% from lb5035. I don't understand why within are two figures, but if I divide my NICs as 30,000 minus 5035 = 24965. NICs is then 11% of 24965 = lb2745 payable within NICs in 2007 for the ET. There is no UEL because I didn't get the limit of lb33,540.

Could anyone give an account me if I've finally got this right? If not, please be benign - it took me ages to get to this point!

gratitude!


Answers: NIC isn't done on a cumulative basis approaching tax. Each week/month is done surrounded by isolation. Therefore two people closing moments up with indistinguishable amount of pay at the close of the year could pay different amounts of NIC if monthly amounts differ. You would necessitate to see your employer's working sheet (form P11) to be able to see how it is made up.
Yes your right, its stupid hows it worked out i imagine it should be done on the same starting place as tax

I didn't file my taxes last year and I want to now, but I dont' have last years W2's. how do i get them?




Answers: Contact your employer for a copy.. if you can't retrieve a copy, then use form 4852 for missing or lost W2s and go ahead and file using 2006 forms.. if you are due a refund, you won't be penalized for late filing. Best Wishes.
You can also obtain IRS issued W-2s in 1-2 business days from Accuverify.com

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