Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just have them give you money. Why would you take payment from a parent to help?
Read the fourth sentence in the original post. Not everyone makes a zillion dollars and can afford to take a month off of work unpaid.
Anonymous wrote:Just have them give you money. Why would you take payment from a parent to help?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t have to pay taxes. Your parent has a $14MM lifetime exclusion on money they give to you and it doesn’t matter if it’s when they are living or you inherit.
Also, you can gift another $18k per year that doesn’t impact the exclusion above.
This isn’t technically true. If this is a payment for service as OP describes, it would be taxable income to OP.
That said, call it a gift and there are no tax ramifications.
OP, literally nobody cares about the bolded.
Don't make this more complicated than it is.
Anonymous wrote:Just have them give you money. Why would you take payment from a parent to help?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t have to pay taxes. Your parent has a $14MM lifetime exclusion on money they give to you and it doesn’t matter if it’s when they are living or you inherit.
Also, you can gift another $18k per year that doesn’t impact the exclusion above.
This isn’t technically true. If this is a payment for service as OP describes, it would be taxable income to OP.
That said, call it a gift and there are no tax ramifications.
OP, literally nobody cares about the bolded.
Don't make this more complicated than it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t have to pay taxes. Your parent has a $14MM lifetime exclusion on money they give to you and it doesn’t matter if it’s when they are living or you inherit.
Also, you can gift another $18k per year that doesn’t impact the exclusion above.
This isn’t technically true. If this is a payment for service as OP describes, it would be taxable income to OP.
That said, call it a gift and there are no tax ramifications.
Anonymous wrote:I have one parent left, and we both know I do most of the work. The other sibling has zero executive function and has mental health disorders, including paranoia.
My parent is willing to pay me for the 50-70 hours of work I've done getting their house ready to sell. I took a lot of time off of work without pay to do this, so I could use the money.
I know I would have to pay taxes on the money if they paid me directly. Is there a legal way around this? For example, my parent could pay for a medical procedure I need or something like that?
TLDR: How can my parent legally pass me money tax free to pay be back for my time?
Anonymous wrote:Just have them give you money. Why would you take payment from a parent to help?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don’t have to pay taxes. Your parent has a $14MM lifetime exclusion on money they give to you and it doesn’t matter if it’s when they are living or you inherit.
Also, you can gift another $18k per year that doesn’t impact the exclusion above.
This isn’t technically true. If this is a payment for service as OP describes, it would be taxable income to OP.
That said, call it a gift and there are no tax ramifications.
Anonymous wrote:You don’t have to pay taxes. Your parent has a $14MM lifetime exclusion on money they give to you and it doesn’t matter if it’s when they are living or you inherit.
Also, you can gift another $18k per year that doesn’t impact the exclusion above.