Nona1
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12-06-2019
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Best Answer Click here
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TAXOH
Level 11
12-06-2019
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I believe so.
Level 15
12-06-2019
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No you do not need SS if child died see Pub 972 "If your dependent child was born and died in 2018 and you do not have an SSN for the child, enter “Died” in column (2) of the Dependents section of your tax return and include a copy of the child's birth certificate, death certificate, or hospital records. The document must show the child was born alive"
TAXOH
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12-06-2019
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Thanks Terry.
Nona1
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12-06-2019
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Thank you for your answer. I will check out Pub 972 also.
Level 15
12-06-2019
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you are welcome
rbynaker
Level 14
12-06-2019
10:11 PM
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I thought this was a statutory requirement for CTC. The very next paragraph (same p972 referenced above) says:
"If your child does not have the required SSN, you cannot use the child to claim the CTC (or ACTC) on either
your original or amended 2018 tax return."
and then the tip right after that:
"If your child is a qualifying child for the CTC, but does not have the required SSN, see Credit for Other Dependents (ODC) next."
Rick
"If your child does not have the required SSN, you cannot use the child to claim the CTC (or ACTC) on either
your original or amended 2018 tax return."
and then the tip right after that:
"If your child is a qualifying child for the CTC, but does not have the required SSN, see Credit for Other Dependents (ODC) next."
Rick
Nona1
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12-06-2019
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That's what I thought was the case under the new tax law but I was not sure if anyone knew if there was an exemption for a child who was born and passed away within a few hours of birth.
rbynaker
Level 14
12-06-2019
10:11 PM
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I don't know the answer but I just wanted to point out the contradiction in Pub 972. For $1,500 more in credit, I'd be inclined to see if they can get a SSN based on the birth certificate. Sounds stupid but I'd file it under "unintended consequences." What a sad situation.
I would tend to interpret 24(e) to be absolute:
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/24#e
Rick
I would tend to interpret 24(e) to be absolute:
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/24#e
Rick
Nona1
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12-06-2019
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It does sound absolute. Thank you for your help.