Federal lawmakers negotiating expanded child tax credit

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Congressional negotiators are closing in on a deal to expand the federal child tax credit that, if it becomes law, would make the program more generous, primarily for low-income parents, as soon as this year.

No agreement has been formally announced by Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and House Ways and Means Chair Jason T. Smith (R-Mo.), who have been trying to strike a deal for months. Any bill’s path to passage remains uncertain, particularly because House Republicans may be reluctant to give President Biden even a partial victory on one of his top domestic economic policy priorities: bringing back something like the expanded child tax credit that was a centerpiece of his 2021 American Rescue Plan.

The emerging deal would make the existing child tax credit more generous, a major Democratic priority. In exchange, it would also continue several business tax breaks favored by corporate America, a Republican priority.

Will the expanded child tax credit bring back monthly checks?

The new expansion will not see the government return to sending out monthly checks to eligible families, as the 2021 expansion did. Half of the increased credit then was paid out in installments to taxpayers, and the other half was eligible to be claimed on tax returns the following year.

Under this new program, taxpayers will have to claim the credit on their returns to receive any money, as they have in all years except for 2021.

How much could the child tax credit increase?

Currently, the child tax credit gives most parents $2,000 per child. For the majority of recipients, that will not change under the new agreement for either this year’s taxes or next year’s. The deal indexes the child tax credit to inflation for the first time, so most parents would benefit from a boost of about $100 on their tax returns in 2025.

In 2021, Biden’s stimulus plan increased the credit from $2,000 per child to $3,000 per child (or $3,600 per child under the age of 6). After that change expired at the end of 2021, however, the credit reverted to $2,000.

The biggest change in the emerging deal is that it would make the credit more generous for families that currently earn too little to claim it in full.

Who’s eligible for the new child tax credit?

Taxpayers who are currently eligible for the current tax credit will continue to be eligible. The changes appear most beneficial to low-income parents with multiple children.

Currently, only middle- and upper-income families receive the full $2,000 credit per child. That is because the credit reduces taxes owed and is not fully refundable, meaning many low-income families who don’t earn enough to owe more than the credit is worth can’t take full advantage of it.

But under the agreement as it currently stands, poor families would be newly eligible to receive the tax credit for every child, even if they do not qualify for the full $2,000 per kid.

For example, a single mother with three kids earning $10,000 annually currently only qualifies for $1,250 in child tax credit benefits. A single mother with three kids earning $150,000 annually receives $6,000, or $2,000 per child.

Under the emerging deal, the single mother earning $150,000 would get the same credit, $6,000. But the benefit for the mother earning $10,000 would triple, from $1,250 for three kids to $3,750 for three kids.

Families with two kids are unlikely to benefit unless they earn less than roughly $40,000 per year, while families with three kids are unlikely to benefit unless they earn less than roughly $70,000 per year, according to Matt Bruenig, founder of the People’s Policy Project, a think tank that advocates for a more generous credit.

Who is not eligible for the new child tax credit?

Families that already receive the full $2,000 credit per child will see no change in their eligibility, though their credits would increase with inflation adjustments in 2025.

The expanded credit would continue to exclude many of the very poorest families. Families currently have to earn at least $2,500 per year to qualify even in part for the child tax credit. Roughly 10 percent of people are below that threshold, according to the People’s Policy Project.

The deal could help some people in this category, with a new provision that allows parents to pick either the current year or the prior year to determine their eligibility. That means families who earn too little to benefit could still qualify if they earned enough the year before to do so. That is particularly important for poor Americans, who have unusually volatile incomes from year to year.

Democrats have pushed to extend the benefit in full to the poorest households, but Republicans have rejected that proposal as likely to discourage parents from seeking employment.

When would the new child tax credit start?

Lawmakers are hurrying to ready the package of tax changes so the new benefit can take effect in time for the upcoming tax filing season. If a deal is not approved in the next several weeks, however, the Internal Revenue Service may not have time to implement the new benefits, potentially leaving lawmakers to try instead for next year’s.

ove the agreement, which has not yet been finalized or announced. Rep. Richard E. Neal (D-Mass.), the top Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, has expressed some reservations about the package. Senate Republicans have traditionally been wary of expanding child benefits, and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) told Roll Call that the chances of getting the agreement done this January “is pretty nil,” citing legislative and substantive objections.

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