When your dependent child starts working, it affects your taxes and theirs. Understanding the income limits, filing requirements, and how employment impacts dependency status is crucial. This guide explains everything that happens when a dependent starts working.
How Employment Affects Dependency
When a dependent starts working, several things can change:
Potential Impacts
- Income limit: Dependent's gross income must stay under $5,100 (unless disabled)
- Support calculation: Child's earnings may affect support test
- Filing requirement: Child may need to file their own return
- Tax credits: May still qualify for Child Tax Credit if under 17
- Dependency status: May lose dependency if income too high or provides own support
Key Point
Working doesn't automatically disqualify a dependent. As long as they meet all requirements (income, support, residency, etc.), they can still be claimed.
Income Limits for Dependents
Dependents have a gross income limit that can affect their dependency status.
2026 Income Limit
- Maximum gross income: $5,100 (2026)
- Exception: No income limit if permanently disabled
- What counts: Wages, interest, dividends, self-employment income
- What doesn't count: Scholarships (tax-free portion), gifts
How It Works
If dependent's gross income is:
- Under $5,100: ✅ Can still be claimed (if meet other requirements)
- $5,100 or more: ❌ Cannot be claimed (unless permanently disabled)
Example: 16-year-old dependent earns $4,500 from part-time job
- Gross income: $4,500
- Below $5,100 limit: ✅ Still qualifies as dependent
Example: 18-year-old dependent earns $6,000 from summer job
- Gross income: $6,000
- Above $5,100 limit: ❌ Cannot be claimed (unless disabled)
Gross Income Test
The gross income test is one of the dependency requirements.
What Counts as Gross Income
✅ Wages: All wages from jobs ✅ Interest: Interest income ✅ Dividends: Dividend income ✅ Self-employment: Self-employment income ✅ Other taxable income: Any other taxable income
What Doesn't Count
❌ Tax-free scholarships: Scholarships (tax-free portion) ❌ Gifts: Money received as gifts ❌ Inheritances: Inherited money ❌ Tax-free income: Other tax-free income sources
Calculating Gross Income
Formula: Add up all taxable income sources
Example:
- Wages: $4,000
- Interest: $200
- Gross Income: $4,200
- Below $5,100: ✅ Still qualifies
Support Test Impact
When a dependent works, their earnings may affect the support test.
How It Works
- Child's earnings used for support: Counts as support child provides
- Must still provide more than half: You must still provide more than 50% of total support
- Calculate carefully: Include child's earnings in support calculation
Example Calculation
Total support needed: $20,000 You provide: $12,000 Child provides from earnings: $5,000 Others provide: $3,000
Your percentage: $12,000 ÷ $20,000 = 60% ✅ Still qualifies
If child provides more:
- You provide: $8,000
- Child provides: $10,000
- Your percentage: $8,000 ÷ $18,000 = 44% ❌ Doesn't qualify
Key Point
If child uses their earnings for their own support, it reduces the amount you need to provide, but you must still provide more than half of total support.
When Dependents Must File
Working dependents may need to file their own tax return.
2026 Filing Requirements for Dependents
Must file if:
- Gross income exceeds standard deduction: $15,400 (2026) for dependents
- OR unearned income exceeds: $1,300 (2026)
- OR earned income exceeds: $15,400 (2026)
- OR net self-employment income exceeds: $400
Standard Deduction for Dependents
- 2026 Amount: $15,400 (if earned income)
- OR: $1,300 (if only unearned income)
- OR: $1,300 + earned income (up to $15,400) if both types
Example
16-year-old dependent earns $8,000 from part-time job:
- Gross income: $8,000
- Standard deduction: $8,000 (earned income, up to $15,400)
- Taxable income: $0
- Must file?: Generally no (but may want to for refund if taxes withheld)
18-year-old dependent earns $20,000:
- Gross income: $20,000
- Standard deduction: $15,400
- Taxable income: $4,600
- Must file: ✅ Yes (exceeds standard deduction)
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Tax Implications for Parents
When your dependent starts working, it affects your taxes.
Still Can Claim (If Requirements Met)
- Child Tax Credit: Still $2,000 if child under 17 and meets requirements
- Dependency exemption: Still can claim if all requirements met
- Other credits: EITC, etc. still available if child qualifies
May Lose Benefits
- If income too high: Child's gross income above $5,100 disqualifies
- If provides own support: Child providing more than half support disqualifies
- If doesn't live with you: Must still live with you more than half year
Coordination
- Child files return: Child may need to file their own return
- Check "Someone can claim me": Child must check this on their return
- Only one claims: You claim on your return, child doesn't claim themselves
Real-World Scenarios
Scenario 1: Part-Time Job, Low Income
16-year-old dependent, earns $3,000 from part-time job, lives with you, you provide all support
- Gross income: $3,000 (below $5,100) ✅
- Support: You provide 100% ✅
- Residency: Lives with you ✅
- Can still claim: ✅ Yes
- Child Tax Credit: $2,000 ✅
- Child must file?: Generally no (income below standard deduction)
Scenario 2: Summer Job, Higher Income
17-year-old dependent, earns $6,500 from summer job, lives with you, you provide all support
- Gross income: $6,500 (above $5,100) ❌
- Cannot claim: ❌ Income too high (unless disabled)
- Child must file: ✅ Yes (if income exceeds standard deduction)
Scenario 3: Uses Earnings for Support
18-year-old dependent, earns $8,000, uses $6,000 for own support, you provide $10,000
- Total support: $16,000
- You provide: $10,000 (62.5%) ✅
- Can still claim: ✅ Yes (you provide more than half)
- Gross income: $8,000 (above $5,100) ❌
- Cannot claim: ❌ Income too high (unless disabled or student under 24)
Note: If child is under 24 and full-time student, income limit doesn't apply.
Planning Strategies
1. Understand Income Limits
- Track child's income: Know how much child earns
- Plan accordingly: If approaching limit, plan strategically
- Student exception: If child is student under 24, no income limit
2. Coordinate Support
- If child saves earnings: Savings don't count as support child provides
- If child spends on support: Counts as support child provides
- Plan spending: May want child to save rather than spend on support
3. Understand Filing Requirements
- Child may need to file: If income exceeds standard deduction
- Coordinate returns: Child files, you claim on your return
- Refunds: Child may get refund if taxes were withheld
4. Plan for Education
- Student exception: Full-time students under 24 have no income limit
- College planning: If child goes to college, income limit doesn't apply
- Scholarships: Don't count as income
Common Mistakes
Mistake 1: Assuming Working Disqualifies
Problem: Thinking child can't be dependent if they work Result: Not claiming when you could Solution: Working doesn't automatically disqualify, check income limit
Mistake 2: Not Understanding Income Limit
Problem: Not realizing $5,100 income limit Result: Claiming when child doesn't qualify Solution: Check child's gross income, must be under $5,100 (unless disabled or student)
Mistake 3: Not Calculating Support Correctly
Problem: Not including child's earnings in support calculation Result: Incorrect support calculation Solution: Include child's earnings used for support in calculation
Mistake 4: Both Claiming
Problem: You claim child, child also claims themselves Result: IRS problems, rejected returns Solution: Child must check "Someone can claim me" on their return
Mistake 5: Not Understanding Student Exception
Problem: Not realizing students under 24 have no income limit Result: Not claiming when you could Solution: If child is full-time student under 24, no income limit
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I still claim my child if they start working?
Yes, if they meet all requirements. Working doesn't automatically disqualify them. Check income limit ($5,100 unless disabled or student under 24) and support test.
What if my child earns more than $5,100?
If your child earns more than $5,100 and is not disabled or a full-time student under 24, they generally cannot be claimed as a dependent. However, if they're a full-time student under 24, there's no income limit.
Does my child need to file a tax return?
It depends on their income. If their gross income exceeds the standard deduction ($15,400 for earned income in 2026), they generally must file. They may also want to file to get a refund if taxes were withheld.
Can my child claim themselves if they work?
No. If you claim your child as a dependent, they cannot claim themselves. They must check "Someone can claim me as a dependent" on their return.
What if my child uses their earnings for their own support?
If your child uses their earnings for their own support, it counts as support they provide. You must still provide more than half of total support to claim them.
How does my child's income affect the Child Tax Credit?
The Child Tax Credit is based on the child being under 17 and meeting dependency requirements. The child's income doesn't directly affect the credit amount, but if their income is too high, they may not qualify as a dependent, which means you can't claim the credit.
What if my child is a full-time student?
If your child is a full-time student under 24, there's no income limit for dependency purposes. They can earn any amount and still qualify as a dependent (if they meet other requirements).
Bottom Line
When a dependent starts working, several things can change:
✅ Income limit: Gross income must stay under $5,100 (unless disabled or student under 24) ✅ Support test: Child's earnings may affect support calculation ✅ Filing requirement: Child may need to file their own return ✅ Still can claim: If all requirements met, can still claim ✅ Student exception: Full-time students under 24 have no income limit
Key Points:
- Working doesn't automatically disqualify a dependent
- Income limit is $5,100 (unless disabled or student under 24)
- Child's earnings used for support count as support child provides
- Child may need to file their own return
- You can still claim if all requirements met
Action Items:
- Track child's income throughout the year
- Understand income limit ($5,100 unless exception applies)
- Calculate support carefully (include child's earnings if used for support)
- Determine if child needs to file their own return
- Coordinate returns (child files, you claim on your return)
- Understand student exception (no income limit if full-time student under 24)
- Plan strategically (child may want to save rather than spend earnings on support)
Remember: When your dependent starts working, it doesn't automatically mean you lose the ability to claim them. As long as they meet all requirements (income, support, residency, etc.), you can still claim them and receive valuable tax benefits. Understanding the income limits and support calculations helps you plan effectively and continue claiming your working dependent.