If you're unmarried with children, you may qualify for head of household status, which is significantly better than single. Understanding the requirements and benefits can save you thousands in taxes.
What Is Head of Household?
Definition
Head of Household = Filing status for unmarried taxpayers who pay more than half the cost of keeping up a home for a qualifying person
Key Requirements:
- Unmarried (or considered unmarried)
- Pay more than half the cost of keeping up a home
- Have qualifying person living with you
- Why: Better tax treatment than single
The Benefit
Better Than Single:
- Higher standard deduction
- Wider tax brackets
- Lower tax
- Why: Recognizes additional financial responsibility
Head of Household Requirements
Requirement 1: Unmarried
Must Be:
- Unmarried as of Dec 31
- Divorced (if final by Dec 31)
- Widowed (if spouse died and not remarried)
- Legally separated
- Why: Can't be married
"Considered Unmarried":
- Legally separated under separate maintenance decree
- Spouse didn't live with you last 6 months of year
- Why: Special rule for separated spouses
Requirement 2: Pay More Than Half
Must Pay More Than 50%:
- Cost of keeping up a home
- For the year
- Why: Shows you're the primary provider
What Counts:
- Rent or mortgage
- Property taxes
- Utilities
- Insurance
- Repairs and maintenance
- Food eaten in home
- Why: All costs of maintaining home
What Doesn't Count:
- Clothing
- Education
- Medical expenses
- Transportation
- Why: Not costs of "keeping up a home"
Requirement 3: Qualifying Person
Must Have:
- Qualifying person
- Living with you
- More than half the year
- Why: Must have dependent-like person
Qualifying Persons:
- Child (son, daughter, stepchild, foster child, etc.)
- Parent (if you pay more than half their support)
- Other relatives (in some cases)
- Why: Must be qualifying relationship
Single vs. Head of Household Comparison
Standard Deduction
2026 Standard Deductions:
- Single: $15,400
- Head of Household: $23,100
- Difference: $7,700 more
Tax Savings (at 22% bracket):
- Single: $15,400 × 22% = $3,388
- Head of Household: $23,100 × 22% = $5,082
- Savings: $1,694
Tax Brackets
Single Brackets (2026):
- 10%: $0 - $11,600
- 12%: $11,601 - $47,150
- 22%: $47,151 - $100,525
- And so on...
Head of Household Brackets (2026):
- 10%: $0 - $16,550
- 12%: $16,551 - $63,100
- 22%: $63,101 - $100,500
- And so on...
Impact: Head of household brackets are wider (better)
Tax Comparison
Example: $60,000 taxable income
Single:
- Tax: ~$6,500
Head of Household:
- Tax: ~$6,000
- Savings: $500
Plus: Higher standard deduction saves more
Combined Benefit
Example: $60,000 gross income
Single:
- Standard deduction: $15,400
- Taxable: $44,600
- Tax: ~$5,200
Head of Household:
- Standard deduction: $23,100
- Taxable: $36,900
- Tax: ~$4,200
- Total Savings: $1,000
Who Qualifies as a Qualifying Person
Qualifying Child
Your Child (son, daughter, stepchild, foster child, etc.):
- Must live with you more than half the year
- Must be your dependent (usually)
- Why: Primary qualifying person
Age Requirements:
- Under 19, OR
- Under 24 if student, OR
- Any age if permanently disabled
- Why: Must be dependent-like
Qualifying Relative (Parent)
Your Parent:
- Must live with you
- You pay more than half their support
- Why: Special rule for parents
Note: Parent doesn't have to live with you (special exception)
Other Qualifying Relatives
Other Relatives (in some cases):
- Grandparent
- Sibling
- Other relatives
- Must live with you
- Must be your dependent
- Why: Extended family support
Not Qualifying
Does NOT Qualify:
- Roommate (not relative)
- Friend (not relative)
- Adult child who is not your dependent
- Why: Must be qualifying relationship
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The "Keeping Up a Home" Test
What Counts
Costs of Keeping Up a Home:
- Rent or mortgage payments
- Property taxes
- Utilities (electric, gas, water, etc.)
- Insurance (homeowners or renters)
- Repairs and maintenance
- Food eaten in home
- Why: All costs of maintaining home
What Doesn't Count
Not Costs of Keeping Up a Home:
- Clothing
- Education expenses
- Medical expenses
- Transportation
- Entertainment
- Why: Not home maintenance costs
The Calculation
Add Up All Costs:
- Your share
- Other person's share (if any)
- Total: All costs
You Must Pay: More than 50% of total
Example:
- Total costs: $24,000/year
- You pay: $15,000
- Other person pays: $9,000
- You pay 62.5%: Qualify ✓
Common Scenarios
Scenario 1: Single Parent with Child
Situation: Unmarried, have child living with you, pay all costs
Requirements:
- ✓ Unmarried
- ✓ Pay more than half (100%)
- ✓ Qualifying person (child)
- Qualify: Yes, head of household
Benefit: Save ~$1,000+ vs. single
Scenario 2: Divorced Parent with Custody
Situation: Divorced, have custody, child lives with you
Requirements:
- ✓ Unmarried (divorced)
- ✓ Pay more than half (likely)
- ✓ Qualifying person (child)
- Qualify: Yes, head of household
Benefit: Save ~$1,000+ vs. single
Scenario 3: Unmarried, Child Lives Elsewhere
Situation: Unmarried, pay child support, but child doesn't live with you
Requirements:
- ✓ Unmarried
- ✗ Child doesn't live with you
- Qualify: No, must file single
Note: Paying support doesn't qualify if child doesn't live with you
Scenario 4: Unmarried, Share Costs
Situation: Unmarried, live with roommate, share costs 50/50
Requirements:
- ✓ Unmarried
- ✗ Don't pay more than half (only 50%)
- ✗ Roommate not qualifying person
- Qualify: No, must file single
Note: Must pay more than half AND have qualifying person
Scenario 5: Caring for Parent
Situation: Unmarried, parent lives with you, you pay all costs
Requirements:
- ✓ Unmarried
- ✓ Pay more than half (100%)
- ✓ Qualifying person (parent)
- Qualify: Yes, head of household
Benefit: Save ~$1,000+ vs. single
Note: Parent doesn't have to live with you (special exception if you pay more than half their support)
How to Claim Head of Household
On Your Tax Return
Form 1040:
- Check "Head of Household" box
- Provide qualifying person information
- Why: Claim the status
Required Information
You'll Need:
- Qualifying person's name
- Qualifying person's SSN
- Relationship to you
- Months lived with you
- Why: Prove qualification
Documentation
Keep Records:
- Proof you pay more than half
- Proof qualifying person lives with you
- Receipts, bills, etc.
- Why: Support your claim if audited
What If You Don't Qualify
Must File Single
If You Don't Qualify:
- File as single
- Higher tax
- Why: Can't claim head of household
Still Benefits:
- Standard deduction: $15,400
- Single brackets
- Why: Still get standard deduction
Common Reasons for Not Qualifying
1. Don't Pay More Than Half:
- Share costs 50/50
- Other person pays more
- Solution: Pay more than half
2. Qualifying Person Doesn't Live With You:
- Child lives with other parent
- Pay support but child elsewhere
- Solution: Must have child live with you
3. Not Unmarried:
- Still married (not divorced)
- Solution: Must be unmarried
4. No Qualifying Person:
- No children
- No qualifying relatives
- Solution: Must have qualifying person
Bottom Line
Head of household vs. single:
- Head of household is better: Higher deduction, wider brackets
- Requirements are strict: Must meet all three requirements
- Saves ~$1,000+: Significant tax savings
- Must qualify: Can't just claim it
- Verify requirements: Especially "pay more than half" test
Key Takeaways:
- Head of household better than single: Higher deduction, wider brackets
- Three requirements: Unmarried, pay more than half, qualifying person
- Saves ~$1,000+: Significant tax savings
- Must meet all requirements: Can't claim if you don't qualify
- Qualifying person must live with you: More than half the year
- You must pay more than half: Of home costs
- Verify before claiming: Wrong status can cause problems
Action Steps:
- Understand head of household requirements
- Determine if you're unmarried (or considered unmarried)
- Calculate if you pay more than half of home costs
- Verify you have qualifying person living with you
- Claim head of household if you qualify (saves money)
- Keep records to support your claim
- Get help if unsure about requirements
Remember: Head of household can save you $1,000+ compared to single, but you must meet all requirements. Don't claim it if you don't qualify—the IRS will catch it and you'll face penalties. But if you do qualify, make sure to claim it—it's a significant tax benefit.