Money The Government Wants Your Tax Client To Have
Its Money The Government Wants Your Tax Client To Have
© 2005 Lois Center-Shabazz
Earned Income Tax Credit or EITC as the Internal Revenue calls it
is a special tax credit the U.S. government has provided for low
income and moderate income individuals. Another way of putting it
is, it's money the government is giving your low-income wage earner
tax clients, as a bonus for working hard for a low wage.
The government has significantly curtailed welfare in the United
States,and minimum wage is far too often the norm for many hard
working unskilled Americans. The government has provided a financial
windfall or tax credit as it is called to make up for the huge
disparity between low-income wage earners and the high cost of
living in the United States. The problem is, many of them don't
understand how they can get money back on their taxes they never
paid in the first place, so many still do not benefit from the
earned income tax credit and millions of dollars sit in the federal
government coffers, unused.
Tax preparers still have time to give this tax credit to their low-
income wage earners, if they have already filed their taxes, you can
file an amendment for them. There are specific qualifications that
MUST be met in order for your clients to qualify for the earned
income tax credit.
>Low-income wage earners MUST meet the following EITC
requirements to receive the credit:
The wage earner must have a valid Social Security Number
The wage earner must have earned income from employment or from self-
employment.
The wage earner filing status cannot be married, filing
separately.
The wage earner must be a U.S. citizen or resident alien
all year, or a nonresident alien married to a U.S. citizen or
resident alien and filing a joint return.
The wage earner cannot be a qualifying child of another person.
>The wage earner can qualify if he or she has no children but, if he
or she does not have a qualifying child, he or she must:
Be age 25 but under 65 at the end of the year,
Live in the United States for more than half the year,
Cannot qualify as a dependent of another person
The wage earner cannot file Form 2555 or 2555-EZ (related to foreign
earned income)
>EITC Thresholds and Limitations
Special rules may apply--Current Tax Year 2005
>Earned income and adjusted gross income (AGI) must each be less
than:
$35,263 ($37,263 married filing jointly) with two or more qualifying
children;
$31,030 ($33,030 married filing jointly) with one qualifying child;
$11,750 ($13,750 married filing jointly) with no qualifying children.
>Tax Year 2005 maximum credit (money that will be paid to the wage
earner):
$4,400 with two or more qualifying children;
$2,662 with one qualifying child;
$399 with no qualifying children.
Investment income must be $2,700 or less for the year.
A "Qualifying Child" - A "qualifying child" may enable a taxpayer
to claim several tax benefits, such as head of household filing
status, the exemption for a dependent, the child tax credit, the
child and dependent care credit and the earned income tax credit.
Prior to 2005, each of these items defined a qualifying child
differently.
If you have already filed for your clients taxes they are still
eligible for the Earned Income Tax Credit, you can file an amendment
for your client.
Lois Center-Shabazz is the author of, Let's Get Financial Savvy!
ISBN#0971979502, and editor of www.Msfinancialsavvy.com,
Receive her free enews, MsFinancialSavvy enews at:
www.msfinancialsavvy.com/register/ecourse7.php
|