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The New Adoption Tax Credit And You
Questions And Answers
The adoption expense tax credit was
modified and made permanent as part of the tax bill signed by President
Bush on June 7, 2001. What will this mean for adoptive families?
The answers below are based on past IRS guidance and best conjecture
and do not reflect official Treasury Department policy, since the
IRS has not yet issued new guidelines.
In a nutshell, what does
the new law provide? It provides a tax credit (an amount that can be deducted directly
from the taxes you owe) for expenses incurred in the adoption
of a child who is not the child of the taxpayer’s spouse. All
the provisions of the new law are permanent; they will not expire,
as the previous tax credit law did. The limitations on the amount
of income parents may earn in order to use the credit was increased:
now you can take the full amount of the credit if your income does
not exceed $150,000. The amount you can take decreases as your
income approaches $190,000. If you earn above that figure, you
don’t qualify for the credit.
Details about the credit differ
by type of adoption: For the adoption of U.S. children with special
needs, the law provides a flat $10,000 credit, regardless of expenses
incurred. The new credit applies to such adoptions finalized after
December 31, 2002.
For the adoption of U.S. children without special
needs, parents can take a tax credit of up to $10,000 for adoption
expenses, even if the adoption is never finalized. This part of the
new law takes effect after December 31, 2001.
For the adoption of children
from other countries, parents can take a tax credit of up to $10,000
for adoption expenses, but only if and when the adoption is finalized.
This also takes effect after December 31, 2001.
- How does the IRS define
a child with special needs? The child must be a citizen or resident of the U.S.
A state must have determined that the child cannot or should not
be returned to his parents’home
and that the child probably will not be adopted unless some assistance
is provided to the adoptive parents. A child who is adopted internationally
can never qualify as a child with special needs in this context.
- December 31, 2002, and for intercountry adoptions
after December 31, 2001, you take the credit in the year of finalization.
For U.S. non-special needs adoptions, the details are complicated
but depend on the year the expense was incurred.
- What if your tax liability
for a particular year is less than your allowable credit for
that year? If you reduce
your tax bill to zero and still have credit coming to you, the
unused credit amount can be carried forward to your next five tax
years, or until it is all used, whichever comes first.
- Does it make sense to
delay final adoption decrees in U.S. special needs and intercountry
adoptions until the increased tax credit has gone into effect? Each case would have to be judged
individually, but the potential benefit is substantial. If all
other factors are neutral, it appears that it would be sensible
in these two types of adptions to wait to finalize in order to
take advantage of the increased tax benefit.
- Is there any special planning
that can be done to maximize benefits with a domestic, non-special
needs adoptions? Since the date on which the expenses are paid or incurred determines
when you can use them for the credit for these adoptions, you
could arguably bring expenses under the new law by delaying the
date on which they are incurred or paid.
Information gathered from the September/October issue of Adoptive
Families Magazine.
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