ADOPTION TAX
BENEFITS
Tax
Benefits Help Adoption
Costs
You
may be able to
take a tax credit for qualifying expenses paid to adopt an eligible
child (including a child with special needs). The adoption credit is an
amount subtracted from your tax liability. Although the credit
generally is allowed for the year following the year in which the
expenses are paid, a taxpayer who paid qualifying expenses in the
current year for an adoption which became final in the current year,
may be eligible to claim the credit on the current year return. The
adoption credit is not available for any reimbursed expense. In
addition to the credit, certain amounts reimbursed by your employer for
qualifying adoption expenses may be excludable from your gross income.
For
both the credit
or the exclusion, qualifying expenses include reasonable and necessary
adoption fees, court costs, attorney fees, traveling expenses
(including amounts spent for meals and lodging while away from home),
and other expenses directly related to and for which the principal
purpose is the legal adoption of an eligible child. An eligible child
must be under 18 years old, or be physically or mentally incapable of
caring for himself or herself. The adoption credit or exclusion cannot
be taken for a child who is not a United States citizen or resident
unless the adoption becomes final. An eligible child is also a child
with special needs if he or she is a United States citizen or resident
and a state determines that the child cannot or should not be returned
to his or her parent's home and probably will not be adopted unless
assistance is provided. Under certain circumstances, the amount of your
qualified adoption expenses may be increased if you adopted an eligible
child with special needs.
The
credit and
exclusion for qualifying adoption expenses are each subject to a dollar
limit and an income limit.
Under
the dollar
limit the amount of your adoption credit or exclusion is limited to the
dollar limit for that year for each effort to adopt an eligible child.
If you can take both a credit and an exclusion, this dollar amount
applies separately to each. For example, if we assume the dollar limit
for the year is $10,000 and you paid $9,000 in qualifying adoption
expenses for a final adoption, while your employer paid $4,000 of
additional qualifying adoption expenses, you may be able to claim a
credit of up to $9,000 and also exclude up to $4,000.
The
dollar limit
for a particular year must be reduced by the amount of qualifying
expenses taken into account in previous years for the same adoption
effort.
The
income limit on
the adoption credit or exclusion is based on your modified adjusted
gross income (modified AGI). If your modified AGI is below the
beginning phase out amount for the year, the income limit will not
affect your credit or exclusion. If your modified AGI is more than the
beginning phase out amount for the year, your credit or exclusion will
be reduced. If your modified AGI is above the maximum phase out amount
for the year, your credit or exclusion will be eliminated.
Generally,
if you
are married, you must file a joint return to take the adoption credit
or exclusion. If your filing status is married filing separately, you
can take the credit or exclusion only if you meet special requirements.
For
more
information on the subject, consult with your Ronald
J. Cappuccio, J.D., LL.M.(Tax)
at (856) 665-2121
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