If he lived with them for the entire year, and he had less than 3200.00 in income then yes, they can claim him as a dependent.NotSoNew said:What is the name of your state? NJ
can my parents claim my brothers friend who has lived with them this year? his own parents are not going to claim him and he lived with my parents the whole year? are they allowed since he is not related to them?
thanks LdiJ, i forgot to mention that he is 20 years old, does that make a difference? If he made over 3200 and is filing his own taxes but doesnt claim HIMSELF on his own taxes (and checks off that someone else can claim him) then could they claim him or no still?LdiJ said:If he lived with them for the entire year, and he had less than 3200.00 in income then yes, they can claim him as a dependent.
However, if he did not live with them the entire year and/or he had more than 3200 in income, then no they cannot. However the dependency exemption is all that they can get. No child tax credit or EIC would apply.
No, if he made more than 3200 they can't claim him.NotSoNew said:thanks LdiJ, i forgot to mention that he is 20 years old, does that make a difference? If he made over 3200 and is filing his own taxes but doesnt claim HIMSELF on his own taxes (and checks off that someone else can claim him) then could they claim him or no still?
ok thanks, does the same hold true for my brother? their son? he made 28K but they are claiming him on their taxes (he lived there the whole year and went to school) he just isnt claiming himself on his own taxes. are they allowed to do this? i did their tax stuff on turbo tax (i know you arent too fond of this program) and it didnt say they werent allowed to claim him! (i didnt file them yet)LdiJ said:No, if he made more than 3200 they can't claim him.
It would be a big mistake for them to claim your brother. He simply made too much money. The rule on claiming adult children (your own children) is that they also can't be contributing more than 50% of their own support. Clearly, if your brother is making 28k, he is absolutely providing more than 50% of his own support. He should be claiming himself.NotSoNew said:ok thanks, does the same hold true for my brother? their son? he made 28K but they are claiming him on their taxes (he lived there the whole year and went to school) he just isnt claiming himself on his own taxes. are they allowed to do this? i did their tax stuff on turbo tax (i know you arent too fond of this program) and it didnt say they werent allowed to claim him! (i didnt file them yet)