Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Tax Tip 2025-17: Tax benefits for parents and families

Bookmark and Share

IRS.gov Banner
IRS Tax Tips March 3, 2026

Useful Links:

IRS.gov

Help For Hurricane Victims


News Essentials

What's Hot

News Releases

IRS - The Basics

IRS Guidance

Media Contacts

Facts & Figures

Around The Nation

e-News Subscriptions


The Newsroom Topics

Multimedia Center

Noticias en EspaƱol

Radio PSAs

Tax Scams/Consumer Alerts

The Tax Gap

Fact Sheets

IRS Tax Tips

Armed Forces

Latest News


IRS Resources

Contact Your Local IRS Office

Filing Your Taxes

Forms & Instructions

Frequently Asked Questions

Taxpayer Advocate Service

Where to File

IRS Social Media

 


Issue Number: Tax Tip 2026-17

Tax benefits for parents and families

Parents and families may be eligible for one or more available tax credits that could reduce their tax bill. Each credit has different eligibility criteria.

The first step is ensuring each child has a social security number. To qualify for any of the various credits, the child and taxpayer must have a valid social security number.

Tax credits for parents and families
Child Tax Credit
A qualifying child must be:

In addition, the taxpayer's annual income can't exceed $200,000 ($400,000 if filing a joint return). Parents and guardians with higher incomes may be eligible to claim part of the credit. For 2025, the amount of the CTC is up to $2,200 per qualifying child. The Additional Child Tax Credit is a refundable portion of the CTC. For 2025, up to $1,700 per qualifying child may be refundable.

Adoption Tax Credit
The Adoption Tax Credit is available to taxpayers who finalized an adoption in 2025 or started the adoption process before 2025.
A qualifying child must be:

  • Under age 18, or
  • Physically or mentally incapable of self-care

Eligible expenses:

  • Reasonable and necessary adoption fees
  • Court costs and legal fees
  • Adoption related travel expenses like meals and lodging
  • Other expenses directly related to the legal adoption of an eligible child

The maximum amount, for 2025, is $17,280 per eligible child. Additionally, there's been changes to the Adoption Tax Credit under the One, Big, Beautiful Bill. The credit is now partially refundable, meaning taxpayers may get back more than what is owed in taxes. The refundable amount is up to $5,000 per qualifying child for tax years 2025 and after. However, any nonrefundable amount carried forward can't be used to calculate a refundable portion for future tax years.

Indian tribal governments now have the same authority as state governments to determine whether a child has special needs for the purpose of claiming the Adoption Credit. Taxpayers who adopt an eligible U.S. child with special needs may be able to claim the credit even if they didn't pay any qualified adoption expenses.

More information
Fact Sheet and FAQs about refundability and recognizing Indian Tribal Governments for purposes of making special needs determination for the Adoption Tax Credit

Subscribe to IRS Tax Tips

Back to top

 


FaceBook Logo  YouTube Logo  Instagram Logo  Twitter Logo  LinkedIn Logo


Thank you for subscribing to IRS Tax Tips, an IRS e-mail service. For more information on federal taxes please visit IRS.gov.

This message was distributed automatically from the IRS Tax Tips mailing list. Please Do Not Reply To This Message.

 


This email was sent to business.solutions.ve@gmail.com by: Internal Revenue Service (IRS) · Internal Revenue Service · 1111 Constitution Ave. N.W. · Washington, D.C. 20535 GovDelivery logo

No comments:

Post a Comment