Head of Household Qualifying Person: Advanced Rules for Kids and Parents
Key Takeaways
- Parents do not need to live with you for HOH — unique exception
- You must pay more than half the cost of maintaining their separate home
- Includes biological parents, adoptive parents, and stepparents
- The parent must qualify as your dependent under IRS rules
- Does not apply to in-laws, aunts, uncles, or non-parent relatives
The Parent Exception Explained
The parent exception for HOH is unique: your parent does not need to live in your household to qualify you for HOH status. This exception exists because many taxpayers financially support aging parents who live in their own home, a care facility, or with other family members.
To qualify, you must pay more than half the cost of maintaining your parent's home — whether that is their own house, an apartment, or a nursing home. The parent must also qualify as your dependent under IRS rules.
Who Counts as a Parent?
For this exception, 'parent' includes biological parents, adoptive parents, and stepparents. Foster parents must meet the dependent relative criteria separately. The parent must be your actual parent — you cannot claim HOH based on supporting in-laws, aunts, uncles, or other non-parent relatives unless they live with you.
This exception recognizes that forcing elderly parents to move in with their children just to qualify for a tax benefit would be impractical and potentially harmful to both parties.
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