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Dependent Care as a Fringe Benefit

Your employer can provide you with a substantial amount of dependent care assistance as a nontaxable fringe benefit. However, it must meet certain criteria.

From the employee's standpoint, the most important requirement is probably the fact that the amount of tax-free assistance is limited to $5,000 a year per family, or to the total amount of the lower-paid spouse's salary, whichever is lower. If one spouse is totally disabled or a student, that spouse is treated as earning $250 per month for one dependent, or $500 per month for two.

Unlike the child and dependent care credit, employer-provided dependent care can be claimed by a married couple filing separately. In that case the maximum dollar limit is $2,500 per spouse. Only the spouse whose employer provides assistance can claim the exclusion; if both spouses' employers provide assistance, they can each claim $2,500.

warning

Warning

To qualify for tax benefits, the dependent care assistance must be offered by the employer under a written plan that does not discriminate in favor of the most highly paid workers. The tax laws say that no more than 25 percent of the amounts paid by the employer for dependent care assistance during the year may be provided for shareholders or owners (or their spouses or dependents), who own more than 5 percent of the stock or of the capital or profits interest in the employer on any day in the year. This means that dependent care programs generally can't be used by very small, family-owned businesses.

Rules for tax credit apply. The kinds of dependents and expenses that may be covered by an employer's dependent care plan are the same as those that would qualify for the tax credit for child and dependent care. So, the rules relating to the earned income test, the work-related expenses test, and the other rules for the tax credit also apply to the employer-provided assistance.


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