Tax Law and News Adoption tax credit helps families with expenses Read the Article Open Share Drawer Share this: Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn Written by Intuit Accountants Team Modified Jan 23, 2023 2 min read The adoption tax credit lets families who were in the adoption process during 2022 claim up to $14,890 in eligible adoption expenses for each eligible child. Taxpayers can apply the credit to international, domestic, private and public foster care adoptions.Things to know about claiming the credit: To claim the adoption credit, taxpayers complete Form 8839, Qualified Adoption Expenses and attach it to their tax return. They use this form to figure how much credit they can claim. There are income limits that affect the amount of the credit. The adoption tax credit is non-refundable. It will reduce a tax bill but won’t result in a refund, even when the amount of credit is greater than the tax bill. However, a taxpayer can carry their leftover credit forward and apply it to future tax returns for up to five years. Who is considered an eligible child: An eligible child is an individual who is under the age of 18 or is physically or mentally incapable of caring for themself.Qualified expenses: Qualified adoption expenses include such things as: Adoption fees. Court costs and legal fees. Adoption related travel expenses such as meals and lodging. Other expenses directly related to the legal adoption of an eligible child. Expenses may be deductible even if the taxpayer pays them before an eligible child is identified. For example, some future adoptive parents pay for a home study at the beginning of the adoption process. These parents can claim the fees as qualified adoption expenses.Qualified adoption expenses do not include expenses that a taxpayer pays to adopt their spouse’s child. They may, however, include adoption expenses paid by a registered domestic partner if that partner lives in a state that allows a same-sex second parent or co-parent to adopt their partner’s child.More information:Form 8839, Qualified Adoption ExpensesTopic No. 607 Adoption Credit and Adoption Assistance Programs Previous Post Backdoor retirement strategies and tax implications Next Post March 2023 tax and compliance deadlines Written by Intuit Accountants Team The Intuit® Accountants team provides ProConnect™ Tax, Lacerte® Tax, ProSeries® Tax, and add-on software and services to enable workflow for its customers. Visit us online or follow us on X, Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn. More from Intuit Accountants Team Comments are closed. Browse Related Articles Practice Management Practical uses of AI for productivity & client work Tax Law and News August 2025 tax and compliance deadlines Tax Law and News Big Beautiful Bill tax deductions for workers and seniors Advisory Services White paper: Scaling advisory services to your clients Tax Law and News Year-round tax planning tips for clients Practice Management Optimizing your firm for hybrid and remote work Grow your practice Scale your firm, your way Advisory Services Modern marriage issues: Postnup agreements Tax Law and News One Big Beautiful Bill summary and tax changes Workflow tools Impact of CRM, portal, and PM software