If I lived apart from my spouse from July 10 to December 31 but wasn't legally separated from my spouse under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance at the end of the year, may I file as head of household? Will my filing status allow me to claim a credit for childcare expenses and the earned income tax credit if I have a qualifying child? Answer: No, you may not file as head of household because you weren't legally separated from your spouse or considered unmarried at the end of the tax year. To be considered unmarried at the end of a tax year, your spouse may not be a member of your household during the last 6 months of the tax year and you must meet other requirements. In this case, your spouse was a member of your household during the last 6 months of the tax year, so you cannot be considered unmarried. Your filing status for the year will be either married filing separately or married filing jointly. You cannot claim the credit for childcare expenses or the earned income tax credit because these credits require married taxpayers to file a joint return to be eligible for the credit. You may be eligible to claim these credits if you decide to file a joint return with your spouse. Some taxpayers using the married filing separately filing status can be treated as not married to claim the earned income tax credit or the credit for childcare expenses. To qualify, the spouse claiming the credits cannot file jointly with the other spouse, needs to satisfy certain other requirements (for example, not have the same principal residence as the other spouse for the last six months of the year or have a written separation agreement), and must have a qualifying child living with them for more than half the year. See What is my filing status? and Publication 501, Dependents, Standard Deduction and Filing Information for information about filing status. Additional Information: Publication 596, Earned Income Credit (EIC) Am I eligible to claim the child and dependent care credit? Publication 503, Child and Dependent Care Expenses Use the EITC Assistant Subcategory: Filing statusCategory: Filing requirements, status, dependents If the parents of a year-old child never married but live together with the child for the tax year, and both contribute to the cost of maintaining the household for the child and themselves, may they both file as head of household? Answer: No, only one parent may claim the child as a qualifying child to file as head of household. To file as head of household you must furnish over one-half of the cost of maintaining the household for you and a qualifying person. Therefore, only one of the parents will have contributed more than one-half of the cost of maintaining the household and be eligible to file as head of household. If a child is a qualifying child of both parents, there is a tiebreaker rule to determine which parent may claim the child. See Publication 501, Dependents, Standard Deduction and Filing Information for more information. Additional Information: What is my filing status? Subcategory: Filing statusCategory: Filing requirements, status, dependents To qualify for head of household filing status, do I have to claim my child as a dependent? Answer: Generally, to qualify for head of household filing status, you must be able to claim a qualifying child or qualifying relative as a dependent. However, a custodial parent may be eligible to claim head of household filing status based on a child even if the custodial parent released a claim to exemption for the child. See Noncustodial parent is claiming our child as a dependent; do I still qualify as head of household? Additional Information: What is my filing status? About Publication 501, Dependents, Standard Deduction, and Filing Information Subcategory: Filing statusCategory: Filing requirements, status, dependents I am divorced with one child. This year my ex-spouse, who is the noncustodial parent, is entitled to claim our child as a dependent. May I still qualify as head of household? Answer: You may still qualify for head of household filing status even though you aren't entitled to claim your child as a dependent, if you meet the following requirements: You're not married, or you’re considered unmarried on the last day of the year. You paid more than half of the cost of keeping up a home, that was your home and the main home of your child for more than one-half of the year. Your child is your qualifying child for purposes other than the dependency exemption and the child tax credit. See Publication 501, Dependents, Standard Deduction and Filing Information for details. Additional Information: What is my filing status? Subcategory: Filing statusCategory: Filing requirements, status, dependents Back to Frequently Asked Questions