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Council Tax, Overpayment.? |
I have recently been informed that my council tax band has been wrong since 1st April 2005.
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Anyone received a stimulus payment that didn't include $300 for child?? |
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I'm going to start a new job, can you work out how much tax I'll pay from these details...? |
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I had to pay taxes this year. Will I still get a rebate check? |
It was determined by my accountant that I owed taxes this year. I wrote a check in April to the IRS to pay the entire amount owed.
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Do you need to file a W2 for a 2nd pt job that didn't take out state or fed tax? |
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Can dependents be claimed by both parents? |
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Where is my stimulus package money? |
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Has anyone had trouble with the Where's my Rebate site? |
| Hi there...has anyone gone to the Where's my Rebate link on the Where's my Refund page on the IRS's website? If so..did it work for you? It cannot find my information and I e-filed and ... |
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malakty2007 | Can i deduct the mileage i used to take my mother in law to and from her doctors appointments? |
I take her at least a couple of times a week. It is 43 miles each way. She is not capable of taking herself to her appointments. |
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Mathew
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Only if she is your dependent. She could take a deduction if she paid you. But I would suspect that she does not have the income to be thinking about deductions. |
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macbeatswindows
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Not being funny but, do you claim her as a dependent on tax forms ????? She may be able to claim mileage on hers if not. |
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sursumcorda
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This is a bit tricky. Medical miles are a legitimate deduction for the tax payer who is itemizing deductions, but only if the miles are for the tax payer or one of his dependents. Unless there are substantial other medical expenses as well in terms of unreimbursed medical bills, prescription meds, insurance premiums, etc., you likely won't get much (or even any) of a deduction because the medical deduction is based on a percentage of your adjusted gross income. |
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ninasgramma
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As others have mentioned, if your mother-in-law is your dependent, then you can take the mileage deduction for her medical transportation. However, this is not necessary.
In order to take your mother-in-law's medical deduction, it must be that
1. She is related to you in one of the qualifying relationships (which she is).
2. She is not a qualifying child (which she is not).
3. You provided over half of her support.
In other words, she could make too much money for you to claim her as a dependent, but if you provided over half of her support, then you can take her medical deductions even if she is not your dependent.
See Pub 502 pages 3-4 for the IRS statement:
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p502.pdf |
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robert w
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nope.
even if u did u would be looking at an audit.
medical expenses deductions limits are high enough that most can't qualify. |
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Judy1
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You can if she's your dependent, you itemize, and your total medical expenses are over 7.5% of your income. So I suppose that means no. |
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Kat G
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Her insurance company may pay for that pending her plan. I would check into that. |
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v b
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Do you provide more than 50% of her support?
If you could claim her as a dependent except that her income is too high, then you can still claim the medical expenses you paid on your tax return...the problem of course is that this is an itemized deduction subject to the total medical expenses being more than 7.5% of your AGI.
IRS publication 502. |
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