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April 16, 2025
Question

"Dependent already claimed for earned income credit" Help please!

  • April 16, 2025
  • 1 reply
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My significant other and I have 2 kids together. We are unmarried and live together with other family. We both had entered both of our kids on each of our returns to compare which would benefit us the best. We agreed to claim one child each on our return. He submitted his return first with both kids as in dependents section but clicked that the other parent (me) will be claiming one of the kids. I submitted my return after and received email that my return is rejected due to dependent already claimed for earned income credit. Is this because my partner had both kids on his return even though he claimed only one as his dependent and marked off that the other dependent will be claimed by the other parent? 

 

Does he need to amend his return and completely take off the dependent that I am suppose to claim? Should I wait to re-file my return until he amends his return or can I go ahead and submit my return? 

 

Sorry in advance for so many questions, but just want to get more clarity since it is now past the deadline. 

1 reply

April 16, 2025

Yes.  Because the kids live with you both for the entire year, when he said you would be claiming the other child, he was treated as the custodial parent and you were treated as the non custodial parent. 

He can amend his return to change this so you can then claim your child and get the EITC. 

Do be aware, that if you are both claiming head of household, it could come back at you because in order to claim head of household you must pay OVER half of the cost of the home.  If you are both claiming head of household for the same home you both cannot pay OVER half of the costs of the home.   So be sure that you both do not say that you are.

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cassieluaAuthor
April 17, 2025

@Vanessa A Thank you for replying and giving more information on this. Should he amend his return asap or wait until its gets processed? And should I wait for him to do all of this or can I mail in my return asap?

April 17, 2025

It is better to wait until his return has processes before it is amended.  That way there is no question about where things stand.  Also, until his amended return is processed, your return will still be rejected, so it will be a while before you can submit your return, either electronically or by mail.  

 

@cassielua 


Edited for clarity 4/17/2025 at 5:44 AM Pacific

 

@cassielua 

After you follow the important points that @Vanessa A  @xmasbaby0  and @AnnetteB6  all mentioned above to be sure you and your significant other are on the same wavelength, you can try the following, if you wish, and you may be able to efile without a rejection and avoid filing a paper return.

 

New this year:

If a dependent has already been claimed on another return and causes a rejection of the second return, the IRS now allows the first-listed (primary) taxpayer on the rejected return to get an IP PIN (a 6-digit Identity Protection PIN) and still successfully efile their return and avoid having to file a return on paper.     I have seen users in this forum where it has worked. and the rejected filer was able to efile successfully.     The IRS says:

 

"Beginning in the 2025 filing season, the IRS will accept Forms 1040, 1040-NR and 1040-SS even if a dependent has already been claimed on a previously filed return as long as the primary taxpayer on the second return includes a valid Identity Protection Personal Identification Number (IP PIN). This change will reduce the time for the agency to receive the tax return and accelerate the issuance of tax refunds for those with duplicate dependent returns. In previous years, the second tax return had to be filed by paper."

 

"This change will benefit filers claiming important tax credits like the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit."  

 

"In the scenario where the dependent has already been claimed on another tax return, the IP PIN provides an important new option. The taxpayer listed first on an e-filed tax return claiming dependents can provide their current year IP PIN when they file. If they do, the return will still be accepted."     The others listed on the return do NOT need to provide an IP PIN if they don’t have one.

 

IRS Source:

https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/irs-takes-steps-to-help-prevent-refund-delays-by-accepting-duplicate-de...