Corduroy Frog Posted yesterday at 03:10 AM Report Posted yesterday at 03:10 AM "Oh by the way, can you quickly do my kid's taxes, he doesn't have much??", as the client expects a simple return that won't take over 5 minutes. Right. You might get a kid of 14 who has unearned income over $1400. Or a kid whose been getting child tax credit for years, but has just turned 17. Or an 18 yearold whose W-2 is so high his parents can't claim him. Or a college student with educational credits who may or may not be able claim him, assuming his parents cannot (which brings on another question). Assuming a child's return has no issues may be one of the most underappreciated things we run into. 3 Quote
Patrick Michael Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago I always tell the parent to send me the information, and I'll take a look. I don't mind doing the kids' return, but I also want to ensure I'm charging the right amount. If it's only a couple of W-2's I charge $25 for the dependent returns. Anything more and the cost goes up. I find it much easier to prepare the return than fix it later when the child didn't check the "Dependent of Another" box. I have also found over the years that most of these kids stay with me once they are out of school and working full time, and I get to charge them full price. 2 Quote
mcb39 Posted 17 hours ago Report Posted 17 hours ago I don't charge for dependent children of my clients unless it is an extraordinary circumstance. If they are students, I want to keep them with the parents so that they don't rob the parents of an exemption. As Patrick Michael said, they almost always stay on as a client once they are in the workforce. Also, I don't charge for active military filers. These are my personal policies that have reaped rewards over the years. Quote
Sara EA Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago Oftentimes the child is a student somewhere who has income in three states! Our fee for dependent returns is $50, like Patrick trying to avoid them claiming themselves and leaving us with a mess to clean up. More if the child has investments, plays with cryptocurrency, or has income in another state. Quote
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