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Earned Income Credit
EIC
Earned
Income Tax Credit EITC
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The
Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC or EIC) is designed to help low-income workers
continue working by reducing their income
tax liability. As long as your income is
below certain amounts and you meet certain
other tests, you may qualify for this credit.
Plus, the EITC is a refundable credit,
meaning that once your tax gets down to
$0, the rest of the credit is refunded
to you.
To qualify for EITC, your adjusted
gross income must be less than $12,590 with
no qualifying children, $33,241 with 1 and
$37,783 with 2 or more. (2007 figures)
For Current figures and to find out if
you are eligible for the Earned Income
Tax Credit, visit the (EITC) IRS page,
and by answering some questions and
providing basic income information using
the
EITC Assistant.
A qualifying child must pass the relationship,
age and residency tests.
EITC Requirements
The tests to determine whether you qualify
for EIC depend on whether you have 1 or
more qualifying children. However, everyone
must meet 8 tests:
-
You
must file a tax return, and you can't
be Married Filing Separately.
-
You must
have a valid social security number.
-
You must
be a U.S. citizen or resident alien
for the entire year.
-
You must
have earned income (income for which
you performed services).
Find EITC Current Year
Income Requirements Here.
-
If you have
investments, your income from them can't
be more than $2,900 in 2007.
-
You can't
file Form 2555 or 2555-EZ to exclude
foreign source income.
-
Your earned
income and adjusted gross income in
2007 must be less than $12,590 if you
have no qualifying children ($14,590
Married Filing Jointly), $33,241 if
you have 1 qualifying child ($35,241
Married Filing Jointly), or $37,783
if you have more than 1 qualifying child
($39,783 Married Filing Jointly).
-
You (or
your spouse) can't be the qualifying
child of another person.
Qualifying Children
A qualifying child must meet these 3 tests:
relationship, age and residency.
Relationship: The child must be your son
or daughter, grandchild, adopted child,
stepchild or eligible foster child. (To
be an eligible foster child, the child must
have been placed with you by a qualified
placement agency, or by judgment, decree,
or other order of any court of competent
jurisdiction.) The child does not have to
be your dependent unless they're married.
(A married child must be your dependent
unless you're divorced or separated and
have given up the right to claim the child
as a dependent to the other parent.)
Age: The child must be younger than 19 at
the end of the year unless they are a full-time
student or permanently and totally disabled.
Full-time students for at least 5 months
of the year must be younger than 24; permanently
and totally disabled individuals may be
any age.
Residency: The child must have lived with
you in your U.S. home for more than 6 months
of the year. (Members of the U.S. Armed
Forces who are out of the country on extended
active duty are considered to be living
in the U.S.) Time away for temporary absences
(for example, attending college) counts
as time living with you. A child who was
born or died during the year meets the residency
test as long as he or she lived with you
the entire time he or she was alive. Also,
the child must have a social security number
that is valid for employment in the U.S.
Claiming the EIC without a Qualifying Child
If you meet the requirements above, but
don't have a child who meets the relationship,
age and residency tests, you must meet all
of the following conditions to claim the
EIC:
You must be at least 25 and younger than
65 at the end of the year.
You don't qualify as a dependent of another
person.
You must have lived in the U.S. for more
than half the year.
The Advance EIC
If you have at least 1 qualifying child
and expect to qualify for the EIC, the Advance
EIC allows you to receive part of the credit
in each paycheck during the year you qualify
for the credit. The maximum Advance EIC
an employer can give you throughout the
year is $1,750 for tax year 2010.
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