
Child support is not tax-deductible for the parent who pays it, and it is not considered taxable income for the parent who receives it. The IRS treats these payments as neutral transfers, meaning neither party reports them on a federal return. However, related issues like dependency claims, tax credits, and enforcement actions can still create real complications at tax time.
If you are the parent making monthly child support payments, your tax options are more limited than you might expect. Federal law draws firm lines around what you can and cannot claim on your return:
If you are the parent receiving child support, the money you receive each month is not subject to federal income tax. Your custodial status, however, opens the door to several meaningful tax advantages:
One of the most frequent mistakes at tax time is conflating child support with alimony, and the two are treated very differently by the IRS.
Child support has no reporting requirement in either direction, as it is simply not reported. Alimony, by contrast, has rules that depend on when your divorce agreement was finalized. For divorce agreements finalized on or before December 31, 2018, alimony payments are deductible for the payer and taxable income for the recipient.
For agreements finalized on or after January 1, 2019, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated both the deduction and the income inclusion, making post-2018 alimony tax-neutral in the same way child support has always been.
If your alimony is still affected by taxes due to an older order, keeping these two categories clearly separated on your return (and in your mind) is important. Mistakenly claiming child support as a deduction or reporting it as income will trigger an IRS correction.
The other place confusion tends to surface is when both parents try to claim the same child as a dependent in the same tax year. This will almost certainly trigger an audit flag and delay both refunds. If your co-parent puts you in this position, contact a child support attorney promptly.
Yes, and the consequences can hit harder than you might anticipate. When you owe past-due child support in Texas, the Office of the Attorney General can report your arrears to the federal government, which activates the Treasury Offset Program. Once that happens, your federal tax refund can be partially or fully intercepted and redirected to cover the outstanding balance. State refunds are subject to the same treatment.
Beyond the financial hit, a child support arrearage can also affect your ability to obtain or renew a passport if the amount owed exceeds $2,500. The state has additional enforcement tools at its disposal as well, including:
Staying current on payments is the simplest way to keep your tax refund intact and avoid a cascade of enforcement actions that become increasingly difficult to unwind.
Tax season often brings child support issues to the surface, such as dependency disputes, offset notices, and questions about what you can and cannot claim. These situations rarely resolve themselves, and waiting until after you file can make them harder to address.
If you are uncertain about how your child support order will affect your next tax filing, or worried that unpaid support could put your refund at risk, acting before tax season gives you time to address dependency disputes, review Form 8332 agreements, and resolve any arrears that might trigger an offset.
Call C. E. Schmidt & Associates PLLC at (281) 550-6650 or contact us online to schedule a consultation with our Houston child support lawyers, who will walk you through your options, clarify how state and federal rules apply to your specific situation, and help you take the right steps to protect your finances and your family.
For experienced Houston family law attorneys skilled in asset division during divorce, contact C.E. Schmidt & Associates, PLLC today to schedule a consultation.
We proudly serve clients across Texas. Visit our Houston office at:
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Houston, TX 77079
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