EITC Eligibility: The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) provides tax breaks for low- and middle-income workers. You can still be eligible if you don’t have any children at all. Your income and the number of eligible children living in your home determine the amount you can claim.
The Earned Income Tax Credit: What is its amount?
In addition to the income limitations, you must fulfill a few other requirements to be eligible for the EITC, such as:
- You have a valid Social Security number and are a citizen or resident alien of the United States.
- If you are married and file separately, you and your spouse must have lived apart for the final six months of the year or be legally separated and not living together after the tax year.
- This tax year, you have not received any income from overseas sources.
- No one is listing you on their tax return as an eligible child.
- You must be at least 25 years old but under 65, to be eligible for the EITC if you are childless. If you are filing jointly with your spouse, one of you needs to be of legal age.
For a child to be eligible for credit, they must also fulfill other requirements.
- They have to be connected to you. This covers grandchildren, stepchildren, foster children, and children by adoption or birth. Additionally eligible are your siblings, half-siblings, and stepsiblings, as well as their offspring.
- They have to be younger than both you and your spouse, if you’re filing jointly, and under 19 at the end of the year. However, the age restriction is 24 if your child is enrolled full-time in school.
- If the child is considered “permanently and disabled” by the IRS, there is no age restriction.
- They had to have spent more than half of the year residing in the United States with you or your spouse.
Special EITC regulations apply to individuals with disability income, children with disabilities, and members of the clergy and military. You can use the EITC Assistant to determine your eligibility and estimate the amount of credit if you want to make sure you and your family qualify.
EITC Qualification Standards
Your earned income must not exceed $63,398 to qualify, and for the tax year 2023, your investment income cannot exceed $11,000. Additionally, by the deadline for filing your return, including any extensions, you must have a working Social Security number.
In addition, you cannot file Form 2555, Foreign Earned Income, and you must be a resident alien or a citizen of the United States for the full year. Certain requirements must be satisfied for separated individuals who are not filing jointly to be eligible.
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Your tax return requires the Social Security numbers of all the people you name to be current, issued before the return’s due date, and valid for employment.
Individual taxpayer identity numbers (ITIN), adoption taxpayer identification numbers (ATIN), and Social Security numbers on cards marked “Not Valid for Employment” are not recognized. However, Social Security cards stamped “Valid for work with DHS authorization” are valid.
You may be eligible for the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) for the 2023 tax year if you file as a head of household, married filing jointly, single, married filing separately, or as a qualifying surviving spouse.
What disqualifies you from receiving the Earned Income Tax Credit?
You can’t get the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) if you have certain kinds of investment income. Dividends, income from a child’s interest and dividends reported on the return, interest that is both tax-exempt and taxable, net rental and royalty income, net capital gains, other portfolio income, and net passive income are all included in this.
On the other hand, you remain eligible if your gains are classified as long-term capital gains under IRC section 1231(a)(1). Sections 1245, 1250, 1252, 1254, and 1255 gains are not included in the EIC computation since they are regarded as ordinary gains.