Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, I was just noting it was a tax credit and not a deduction
New poster, with a polite & respectful request for you and others who get picky about the technical differences between credits, deductions, write-offs, etc: Yes, we understand there are important differences among these items, and that they get treated differently by the Tax Code and in returns. However, when someone is asking a basic question -- such as "Is ____ deductible?" -- it's really disruptive to the discussion to have a tangential battle over technical terminology. It's especially frustrating to see someone belittle other posters or their contributions because they used the wrong terminology. Regardless of whether the item is a credit or a deduction, or whether it can be "written off," the poster is usually just asking whether she can get some tax benefit or not. Can you all please, please, please try to focus on the substantive question without bickering over the technical details? It would improve the attitude of this forum, and might keep us from devolving into the snark-fest that we see on other forums. Thanks for your consideration.
Anonymous wrote:Right, I was just noting it was a tax credit and not a deduction
Anonymous wrote:There's get the info and enter it in TurboTax--it will calculate how much of a tax credit you get through the Childcare Tax Credit. I believe the way it works is this: for one child, you can receive a tax credit for up to $3,000 dollars worth of childcare expenses, and for two or more up to $6,000. I believe it is for between 20-35% of your expenses on this amount, depending on your income (for most DCUMers, that would be 20% because I think that phase out starts at something like 40-50K). So if you have one kid, you can receive a tax credit of ~$600-1050 dollars, and for two that would be ~$1200-2100. This means your tax liability is reduced by that amount. It's not a deduction or a "write off," just a tax credit.
Anonymous wrote:OP here again. Sorry if i am being dense about this. So if HHI is 120k; do i just input how much we paid for childcare and this will reduce what we owe (and yes, it was looking like we owed a ton of money till i input this so this is why i am confused).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, you can write it off. Get the tax ID # from the preschool. Our kids went to a very part-time preschool and it had a # set up.
It is not a business expense. It does qualify for the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit, which is a share of $3000, depending on income.
So what does this mean? Please explain. This is what i am reading but i dont know how this translates. Or will Turbotax figure it out for me if i just input how much we pay the preschool?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, you can write it off. Get the tax ID # from the preschool. Our kids went to a very part-time preschool and it had a # set up.
It is not a business expense. It does qualify for the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit, which is a share of $3000, depending on income.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, you can write it off. Get the tax ID # from the preschool. Our kids went to a very part-time preschool and it had a # set up.