The Kiddie Tax: Limits on Shifting Unearned Income to Children

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For a long time, a popular tax-saving strategy for high-income families was to funnel unearned income through their children to reduce their overall taxes. The IRS has never been thrilled with this practice and adopted the "kiddie" tax in the 1980s to limit its effectiveness by taxing certain amounts of children's unearned income at a very high rate. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), the massive tax reform law that took effect in 2018, made major changes in the kiddie tax that were in effect for 2018 and 2019. However, these proved so unpopular they were repealed in 2019.

Who Does the Kiddie Tax Apply To?

The kiddie tax only applies to:

To be considered a student, a child must attend school full-time during at least five months of the year. It doesn't matter whether the child is claimed as a dependent on the parent's return. However, the tax does not apply to a child under 24 who is married and files a joint tax return.

The kiddie tax applies only to unearned income a child receives from income-producing property (or investment property), such as cash, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and real estate. Any salary or wages that a child earns through full or part-time employment (or self-employment) aren't subject to the kiddie tax rules—that income is taxed at the child's regular income tax rate.

If your child's interest and dividend income (including capital gain distributions) was more than $1,250 and less than $12,500 (2023), you can elect to include that income on your (parents') return rather than file a return for the child. In this event, all the income is taxed at your tax rates—you could end up paying more with this method.

Otherwise, a child with more than $2,500 in unearned income in 2023 must file their own tax return with IRS Form 8615, Tax for Certain Children Who Have Unearned Income.

Also, children who earn more than the standard deduction—$13,850 in 2023—from both earned and unearned income must file their own tax return.

The Kiddie Tax for 2020 and Later

The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement Act of 2019 (SECURE Act) repealed the changes made by the TCJA in the kiddie tax. The SECURE Act reinstated the kiddie tax as it was before 2018. This change is mandatory for 2020 and later. Under these rules, the Kiddie tax works like this:

Tax Rate

Married, filing jointly

Head of household