Janine E. Anthes
With people living longer than ever
before, many adults find themselves taking
care of their parents. An Investor's Business
Daily article outlines some of the
ways to ease tax burdens while assisting
parents. You can claim elder parents as
dependents with a $3300 deduction, but
with a few clauses, so be careful. The
deduction begins to phase out for joint-filing
couples with an adjustable income
over $225,750 and disappears completely
over $348,450. Single filers have their
deduction phased out starting at $150,000
and disappearing at $273,000. All the
dependent's taxable income cannot be
over $3300, and the dependent must be
an American or Canadian citizen. Furthermore,
you must be providing more than
half of the dependent's living/support
expenses (ie, clothing, housing, education,
health care, transportation, etc). Investor's
Business Daily suggests that the dependent
switch their taxable bank account into
a tax-exempt bond fund in order to avoid
going over their maximum income. A
group of siblings or direct relatives may
sign a Multiple Support Declaration, IRS
Form 2120, in order to share financial
responsibility and be able to cover that
50% living expenses minimum. If more
than 7.5% of your income goes to the elder
dependent's health care, the excess can be
an itemized deduction. As always, document
and research your tax options before
agreeing to be financially responsible.