Determine Filing Status And Dependency
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CPA Tax Compliance & Planning (TCP) › Determine Filing Status And Dependency
Paige is unmarried and lived with her fiancé all year. Paige paid more than half the cost of keeping up the home. The fiancé’s child (age 3) lived with them all year, but the fiancé (the child’s parent) claims the child as a dependent. Paige earned $67,000 of wages and $2,000 of interest. Under IRC §2(b) and IRS head of household rules, which filing status is most appropriate for Paige for 2025?
Qualifying surviving spouse, because Paige maintained a home for a child
Single, because Paige does not have a qualifying person for head of household purposes
Married filing separately, because Paige lived with a partner and child
Head of household, because Paige paid more than half the cost of keeping up the home
Explanation
IRC §2(b) requires a qualifying person for head of household status, which generally means a dependent for whom the taxpayer can claim an exemption or who would qualify except for certain exceptions. Since Paige's fiancé claims their child as a dependent, and the child is not related to Paige, Paige has no qualifying person for head of household purposes despite paying more than half the household costs. The correct answer is single because Paige lacks a qualifying person for head of household status. Answer A is incorrect because paying household costs alone doesn't qualify someone for head of household without a qualifying person; C is incorrect because qualifying surviving spouse requires a deceased spouse; D is incorrect because Paige is not married. The key principle is that head of household requires both maintaining a household and having a qualifying person, typically a dependent the taxpayer can claim.
Quinn and Sage are married but lived apart for the last 7 months of 2025. Quinn paid more than half the cost of maintaining the home where Quinn lived with their child (age 7) for more than half the year, and Sage did not live in the home during the last 6 months of the year. Quinn earned $58,000 and Sage earned $40,000. Under IRC §2(b) and the IRS “considered unmarried” rules, which filing status is most appropriate for Quinn for 2025?
Married filing jointly, because Quinn and Sage were still legally married at year-end
Married filing separately, because a married taxpayer can never qualify for head of household status
Head of household, because Quinn is considered unmarried and maintained a household for a qualifying child
Single, because living apart for more than 6 months makes Quinn unmarried for all purposes
Explanation
IRC §2(b) provides that a married taxpayer can be considered unmarried for head of household purposes if they lived apart from their spouse for the last 6 months of the year, maintained a household for a qualifying child for more than half the year, and paid more than half the household costs. Quinn meets all requirements: lived apart from Sage for the last 7 months (including the entire last 6 months), maintained the home where their child lived for more than half the year, and paid more than half the costs. The correct answer is head of household because Quinn qualifies as considered unmarried and meets all other requirements. Answer B is incorrect because being considered unmarried allows head of household despite legal marriage; C is incorrect because living apart doesn't make someone single for tax purposes; D is incorrect because the considered unmarried rules specifically allow married taxpayers to use head of household. The key principle is that married taxpayers living apart can qualify for head of household if they meet the specific considered unmarried requirements.
Jasmine is unmarried and provides support for her friend (age 30) who lived with Jasmine all year. Jasmine paid 70% of the friend’s support; the friend had $2,000 of taxable wages and $0 other income. Jasmine earned $68,000. Under IRC §152(d) and the “member of household” qualifying relative rules, who qualifies as a dependent under IRS guidelines?
The friend qualifies as a qualifying relative because the friend lived with Jasmine all year, Jasmine provided more than half of support, and the friend’s gross income is below the limit
The friend does not qualify because a dependent must be related to the taxpayer by blood or marriage
The friend qualifies as a qualifying child because Jasmine provided more than half of support
The friend does not qualify because wages are not counted in the gross income test for dependents
Explanation
IRC §152(d) allows unrelated individuals to qualify as qualifying relatives if they are members of the taxpayer's household for the entire year and meet other qualifying relative tests including the gross income and support tests. Jasmine's friend (age 30) lived with Jasmine all year, Jasmine provided 70% of support, and the friend's gross income of $2,000 is below the exemption amount (approximately $5,050 for 2025), meeting all requirements for a member of household qualifying relative. The correct answer recognizes that unrelated individuals can be dependents through the member of household test. Answer B is incorrect because unrelated adults cannot be qualifying children; C is incorrect because the member of household exception allows unrelated individuals; D is incorrect because wages count toward the gross income test. The principle is that anyone who lives with the taxpayer all year can potentially be a qualifying relative if they meet the support and gross income tests.
Ethan and Zoe divorced in 2023 and have one child (age 12). In 2025 the child lived with Ethan 160 nights and with Zoe 205 nights. Ethan earned $120,000 and Zoe earned $55,000; Zoe did not sign any release. Under IRC §152(e) and IRS rules for children of divorced parents, which IRS rule affects the determination of filing status and dependency?
The parent who pays the most child support is always the custodial parent for dependency purposes
The custodial parent is the parent with whom the child lived for the greater number of nights, and that parent generally claims the child absent a valid written release
A divorce decree alone automatically transfers the dependency claim to the noncustodial parent
The parent with higher adjusted gross income automatically claims the child if both parents are divorced
Explanation
IRC §152(e) establishes special rules for children of divorced parents, designating the parent with whom the child lived for the greater number of nights as the custodial parent who claims the dependency exemption unless a valid Form 8332 release is executed. The child lived with Zoe for 205 nights and Ethan for 160 nights, making Zoe the custodial parent regardless of income levels or child support payments. The correct answer states the proper rule that custodial parent status is determined by counting nights and that parent generally claims the child absent a written release. Answer B is incorrect because child support payments don't determine custodial parent status; C is incorrect because income levels are irrelevant to custody determination; D is incorrect because a divorce decree alone cannot transfer dependency rights without Form 8332. The fundamental principle for divorced parents is that dependency follows physical custody as measured by nights, not financial support or income levels.
In 2025, Jordan’s spouse died on March 2, 2025, and Jordan did not remarry during 2025. Jordan paid more than half the cost of maintaining a home for a dependent child (Jordan’s biological son, age 9) who lived with Jordan all year, and Jordan had wage income of $78,000 and interest income of $600. Under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) §2(a) and the IRS rules for a surviving spouse, which filing status is most appropriate for Jordan for 2025?
Married filing separately, because a spouse died during the tax year
Single, because the spouse was deceased at year-end
Head of household, because Jordan is unmarried at year-end and has a dependent
Qualifying surviving spouse, because Jordan maintained a household for a qualifying child and did not remarry
Explanation
IRC §2(a) provides that a surviving spouse may use the qualifying surviving spouse filing status for two years following the year of the spouse's death if they maintain a household for a dependent child and do not remarry. In this case, Jordan's spouse died in 2025, Jordan did not remarry, and Jordan maintained a home for a dependent child (biological son, age 9) who lived with Jordan all year. The correct answer is qualifying surviving spouse because Jordan meets all requirements: the spouse died during the tax year, Jordan has not remarried, and Jordan maintains a household as the principal place of abode for a dependent child. Single (A) is incorrect because Jordan can use a more beneficial status; married filing separately (B) is incorrect because Jordan can file a joint return for the year of death or use qualifying surviving spouse status; head of household (D) is incorrect because qualifying surviving spouse provides the same benefits as married filing jointly and takes precedence when available. The key principle is that qualifying surviving spouse status provides the same tax rates and standard deduction as married filing jointly for up to two years after a spouse's death when a dependent child is present.
Leah is unmarried and paid all costs of maintaining a home for her son (age 18), who lived with her all year and is not a student. The son earned $9,500 from a job and used it to pay for his own car and personal expenses; Leah paid all housing, food, and medical costs. Leah’s wages were $60,000. Under IRC §152(c) and IRS qualifying child rules, who qualifies as a dependent under IRS guidelines?
The son qualifies as Leah’s qualifying child because he is under age 19 and did not provide more than half of his own support
The son does not qualify because his earned income exceeds the gross income test
The son qualifies only as a qualifying relative because he is 18
The son does not qualify because Leah must provide 100% of the son’s support
Explanation
IRC §152(c) establishes that a child under age 19 at year-end who lives with the parent for more than half the year qualifies as a qualifying child if they did not provide more than half of their own support. Leah's son (age 18) lived with her all year, and while he earned $9,500 and used it for personal expenses, Leah paid all housing, food, and medical costs, meaning the son did not provide more than half of his total support. The correct answer recognizes the son as a qualifying child because he meets all tests: relationship (son), age (under 19), residency (lived with Leah all year), and support (did not provide more than half of own support). Answer B is incorrect because qualifying children have no gross income limit; C is incorrect because age 18 qualifies for qualifying child status; D is incorrect because the test is whether the child provides more than half of their own support, not whether the parent provides all support. The key principle is that a child's earned income does not disqualify them as a qualifying child if they don't provide more than half of their own support.
Noah is divorced and has two children. Child A (age 15) lived with Noah 183 nights and with the ex-spouse 182 nights; Child B (age 9) lived with the ex-spouse 250 nights and with Noah 115 nights. Noah earned $92,000; the ex-spouse earned $60,000; no written release was signed. Under IRC §152(e) and IRS residency tiebreaker rules, based on the taxpayer’s situation, which dependents can be claimed by Noah for 2025?
Only Child B, because the younger child is automatically assigned to the higher-income parent
Neither child, because custody is split and no parent can claim dependents
Only Child A, because Noah is the custodial parent for Child A based on nights lived with each parent
Both Child A and Child B, because Noah’s adjusted gross income is higher
Explanation
IRC §152(e) establishes that for divorced parents, the custodial parent is determined by counting nights the child lived with each parent, and that parent claims the child unless they sign Form 8332 releasing the claim. Child A lived with Noah 183 nights versus 182 with the ex-spouse, making Noah the custodial parent for Child A by one night; Child B lived with the ex-spouse 250 nights versus 115 with Noah, making the ex-spouse the custodial parent for Child B. The correct answer recognizes that Noah can only claim Child A based on the nights test. Answer A is incorrect because income doesn't determine custody; C is incorrect because age doesn't affect custody determination; D is incorrect because split custody allows each parent to claim the children for whom they are custodial parent. The key principle is that custody for tax purposes is determined child by child based on nights, and even one additional night determines the custodial parent.
Casey is unmarried and supports Casey’s nephew (age 17) who lived with Casey all year; Casey also supports Casey’s mother who lived in her own apartment all year. Casey provided 60% of the mother’s support and the mother had $3,200 of Social Security benefits and $900 of tax-exempt interest (no other income). Casey’s wages were $71,000. Under IRC §152 (qualifying relative) and IRS head of household rules, based on Casey’s situation, which dependents can be claimed?
Only the nephew, because a parent must live with the taxpayer to be a dependent
Only the mother, because a nephew cannot be a qualifying child
Neither, because tax-exempt interest and Social Security always disqualify a dependent
Both the nephew (qualifying child) and the mother (qualifying relative), assuming all other tests are met
Explanation
IRC §152 defines two categories of dependents: qualifying children and qualifying relatives, with different tests applying to each category. Casey's nephew (age 17) who lived with Casey all year meets the qualifying child tests: relationship (nephew qualifies), age (under 19), residency (lived with Casey all year), and support (did not provide more than half of own support). Casey's mother meets the qualifying relative tests: relationship (parent qualifies), gross income test (Social Security benefits and tax-exempt interest totaling $4,100 are below the exemption amount), and support test (Casey provided 60% of support). The correct answer recognizes both can be claimed because each meets their respective dependency tests. Answer A is incorrect because parents need not live with the taxpayer; B is incorrect because nephews can be qualifying children; D is incorrect because neither tax-exempt interest nor Social Security benefits automatically disqualify dependency if under the gross income limit. The key principle is that different dependency rules apply to qualifying children versus qualifying relatives, and a taxpayer may claim multiple dependents if each meets the applicable tests.
Sophia is unmarried and maintained a home for her father (who lived with her all year) and her niece (age 19), a full-time student who lived with Sophia all year. Sophia provided 60% of the father’s support; the father had $4,200 of taxable Social Security benefits and $700 of interest. The niece earned $8,000 of wages but did not provide more than half of her own support. Sophia’s wages were $82,000. Under IRC §152, who qualifies as a dependent under IRS guidelines?
Neither, because Sophia must provide 100% of each person’s support to claim them
Only the father, because the niece’s wages prevent dependency
Both the father (qualifying relative) and the niece (qualifying child), assuming all other tests are satisfied
Only the niece, because a parent cannot be a dependent if receiving Social Security
Explanation
IRC §152 allows taxpayers to claim multiple dependents if each meets the applicable tests, with different rules for qualifying children versus qualifying relatives. Sophia's father appears to meet qualifying relative tests with $4,900 gross income ($4,200 Social Security plus $700 interest) if below the limit, and Sophia provided 60% of support; the niece (age 19, full-time student) meets qualifying child tests as she lived with Sophia all year and didn't provide more than half of her own support despite earning $8,000. The correct answer recognizes both can be claimed if all tests are met. Answer A is incorrect because the niece's wages don't prevent qualifying child status; B is incorrect because Social Security doesn't automatically disqualify dependency; D is incorrect because the support test requires more than half, not 100%. The principle is that taxpayers can claim multiple dependents of different types when each meets their respective requirements.
Mia is unmarried and lived with her adult son (age 27) all year. Mia paid 80% of the son’s support. The son had $6,800 of taxable wages and $200 of interest income. Mia earned $66,000. Under IRC §152(d) and the gross income test, who qualifies as a dependent under IRS guidelines?
The son does not qualify as a dependent because his gross income exceeds the qualifying relative gross income limit and he is too old to be a qualifying child
The son qualifies as a dependent only if Mia files as head of household
The son qualifies as a qualifying child because he lived with Mia all year
The son qualifies as a qualifying relative because Mia provided more than half of support
Explanation
IRC §152(d) requires qualifying relatives to have gross income below the exemption amount (approximately $5,050 for 2025), and adult children over age 23 who are not full-time students can only qualify as qualifying relatives, not qualifying children. Mia's son (age 27) had $7,000 in gross income ($6,800 wages plus $200 interest), which exceeds the gross income limit for qualifying relatives, disqualifying him as a dependent despite Mia providing 80% of his support. The correct answer recognizes that the son cannot be a dependent due to exceeding the gross income limit and being too old for qualifying child status. Answer A is incorrect because the son exceeds the gross income limit; B is incorrect because he's too old and not a student for qualifying child status; D is incorrect because filing status doesn't determine dependency eligibility. The principle is that adult children must meet the qualifying relative gross income test to be dependents.