Earned Income Credit
The United States federal Earned Income Credit (EITC or EIC) is a refundable tax credit designed to encourage low-income workers and offset the burden of U.S. payroll taxes. For the tax year 2020, a claimant with one qualifying child can receive a maximum credit of $6,431. A claimant with two qualifying children can receive a maximum Earned Income Credit of $5,028. The Earned Income Credit is expanded for the tax year 2019 and 2020. For claimants with three or more qualifying children, the maximum credit is $5,657. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, and siblings can also claim a child as their qualifying child provided they shared residence with the child for more than six months of the tax year. However, in tie-breaker situations in which more than one filer claims the same child, priority will be given to the parent. A foster child also counts provided the child has been officially placed by an agency or court. There is a much more modest Earned Income Credit for persons and couples without children that reaches a maximum of $457.
A qualifying child can be up to and including age 18 at the end of the tax year, up to and including age 23 if classified as a full-time student for one long semester or equivalent, or any age if classified as “permanently and totally disabled” (one year or more).
Enacted in 1975, the initially modest Earned Income Credit has been expanded by tax legislation on a number of occasions, including the more widely-publicized Reagan EIC expansion of 1986. The EIC was further expanded in 1990, 1993, and 2001 regardless of whether the act in general raised taxes (1990, 1993), lowered taxes (2001), or eliminated other deductions and credits (1986). Today, the Earned Income Creditis one of the largest anti-poverty tools in the United States (despite the fact that most income measures, including the poverty rate, do not account for the credit), and enjoys broad bipartisan support.
In the United States as of the tax year 2006, some 20 states and the District of Columbia had their own EICs. These state plans generally mimic the federal structure on a smaller scale, with individuals receiving a state credit equal to a fixed percentage—generally between 15 and 30 percent—of what they are eligible to receive from the federal credit. A few small locals Earned Income Credithave been enacted in San Francisco, New York City, and Montgomery County, Maryland. Accountants in Miami
Earned Income Credit
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