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Child Care Credit
Can I claim the Child and Dependent Care Credit?
If you paid someone to care for your dependent under age 13 or your disabled dependent or spouse so that you could work or look for work, you may be able to claim the credit for child and dependent care expenses. For specific information on how to qualify for this credit refer to Tax Topic 602, Child and Dependent Care Credit, or Publication 503 (PDF), Child and Dependent Care Expenses.
My spouse and I both work and are eligible for the Child and Dependent Care Credit. May I include my 5 year old son's parochial school kindergarten tuition cost as a qualified expense in Form 2441, Child Care Expenses?
The expenses for kindergarten do not qualify for the dependent care credit if the kindergarten is primarily educational in nature. Expenses for school in the first grade or higher do not qualify for the credit. However, you can count the part of the expenses of sending your child to school that is for your child's care if it can be separated from the expenses of education. For example, you may count the cost of an after school care program even though the school tuition does not qualify.
My divorce decree states that my ex-spouse can claim our daughter as an exemption on alternate years. I am the custodial parent and pay child care expenses. Can I claim child care expenses on the years he takes the exemption?
The Child and Dependent Care Credit can only be claimed by the custodial parent. This is true even if you cannot claim the child's exemption because the divorce decree allows the other parent to claim the exemption, or you have released the exemption on Form 8332. Refer to Publication 503 (PDF), Child and Dependent Care Expenses, for a complete discussion.




