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Paying for Child Care (page 4)

By Eva Cochran|Mon Cochran|Nancy Torp
Cornell University, College of Human Ecology

Ways to Reduce Your Expense

Most modern industrialized societies have public policies that help families with the cost of child care. These policies recognize that parents are much better workers if they can afford to place their children in child care arrangements of good quality. Studies in the United States have shown that parents with good child care arrangements are absent from work less often and are more productive while on the job than those whose child care is inadequate.

In this country we have two kinds of financial subsidies designed to reduce the overall cost of child care. Although in most cases they are not very generous compared with the support many European countries provide to their parents, they are better than nothing. Take advantage of these chances to save money! You deserve them, and they are part of your right as hardworking American parents.

Tax-Based Subsidies

The federal Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit allows you to subtract up to 30 percent of the first $2,400 you pay for child care from your federal income tax. If you have child care costs for two or more children, your savings can be up to 30 percent of the first $4,800 you pay for care. The percentage of those costs that you can actually deduct depends on your income—the lower your income, the more you can deduct. The table below shows how much you can deduct at five different income ranges. This example is based on a married couple filing jointly with both parents employed and one child in child care.

Adjusted Gross Income

Child Care Credit

$10,000

$720

$20,000

$600

$30,000

$480

$40,000

$480

As you can see, the tax savings is never more than $720 with one child in care. The upper limit is $1,440 for two or more children. If you owe less than those amounts in federal tax, your savings will be lower because the government won’t pay you the difference in cash. Unfortunately, that is likely to be true in the $10,000 example shown above because standard deductions for that family would add up to over $9,000, leaving less than $1,000 to be taxed and a tax of less than $150. But suppose you will be paying $4,800 in child care for one child. If you can deduct the full $720, you can recover 15 percent of that total expense, or about $60 a month. Every little bit helps!

For more detailed information about the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit, call the local office of the Internal Revenue Service. Have them send you Form 2441 and any accompanying instructions. During tax season these forms are often available at your local post office. If you have your tax statements prepared professionally, that person will be able to tell you what the deduction will be at your income level.

At least twenty-two states and the District of Columbia also offer child care tax credit programs. Check with your local child care information and referral agency or any professional tax preparer to see whether your state provides this benefit. If it does, you can deduct this percentage from your state tax in addition to what you deducted on your federal tax return.

The federal government will also allow your employer to make it possible for you to pay up to $5,000 of your child care costs in pretax dollars. The Dependent Care Assistance Plan lets you set up to $5,000 of your income aside to pay for child care. You will not have to pay tax on that income, which will result in a saving. This plan is not in addition to that provided by the child care tax credit; it is an alternative to the credit.

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