Who Gets to Claim the Child After a Split? Custodial vs. Non-Custodial Rules

A separated couple stands with their young daughter in a sunlit park, illustrating custodial vs. non-custodial parent rules for claiming a child on taxes after a split.

After a split, the IRS usually gives child-related tax benefits to the custodial parent—the one with more overnights during the year. If time is exactly equal, a tie-breaker awards the child to the parent with the higher AGI. Form 8332 can transfer dependency, but it doesn’t transfer Head of Household or EITC. IRS+2IRS+2 IRS definitions … Read more

Child Tax Credit vs. EITC for Single Parents: Which Pays More?

For most single parents, both credits matter, but the bigger check often comes from the EITC when your earned income is in its sweet spot and your child lived with you over half the year. The CTC can still be huge, especially if you owe tax. Here’s how to see which one pays more for … Read more

Can You Claim the EITC as a Single Parent? 5 Fast Checks

The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) can boost single-parent refunds—if you pass a few strict tests. Run these five quick checks: your child’s residency, whether you’re claiming the with-child or no-child EITC, your investment-income cap, your filing status/Form 2555, and tie-breaker risks if both parents could claim. What the EITC is (and why single parents … Read more

Head of Household for Single Parents: Do You Qualify?

If you’re a single parent, filing Head of Household (HOH) can lower your tax bill—but only if you meet three tests: you’re unmarried (or “considered unmarried”), you paid over half the cost of keeping up your home, and you have a qualifying person. Here’s the plain-English guide to know if you truly qualify. Why Head … Read more

Tax Credits for Single Parents: EITC, ACTC & Head of Household

If you’re a single parent, your three biggest tax wins are: Head of Household (larger standard deduction), the Child Tax Credit/Additional CTC (via Schedule 8812), and the EITC (often the largest cash refund). Qualify for HoH first, then claim CTC/ACTC, then EITC—and keep records that prove residency and support. IRS+2IRS+2 Bottom line: Nail HoH → … Read more

Child Support 101 for Single Parents: File, Enforce, Modify

Quick answer: the fastest way to start getting support If you’re a single parent, the quickest path is to open a case with your state child support agency (IV-D office) and request paternity (if needed) + a support order + immediate income withholding. While the case is opening, gather proof of income, childcare costs, and … Read more

Housing Help for Single Parents: Section 8 & Emergencies

Quick answer for single parents: your fastest paths to safe housing If you’re a single parent, the quickest first step is to apply through your local Public Housing Agency (PHA) for Section 8 vouchers and Public Housing, and—if those lists are closed—use HUD’s Find Shelter, 211, and local Continuum of Care to secure emergency shelter/rapid … Read more

Child Care Assistance 2025: CCDF Vouchers, Costs & Waitlists

Quick answer: What CCDF pays for—and who qualifies The Child Care & Development Fund (CCDF) helps low- and moderate-income families pay for child care so parents can work, look for work, attend school, or training. You apply through your state or territory, choose an eligible provider (center, family child care, or sometimes a qualifying relative), … Read more

SNAP for Single Parents: Eligibility, Deductions & Max Pay

Quick answer: Do single parents qualify for SNAP? Yes—SNAP is for low-income households with kids, and most single-parent families qualify once you count legal deductions off your income. For FY 2026 (Oct 1, 2025–Sep 30, 2026), USDA raised key amounts (e.g., standard deduction $209 for small households; shelter cap $744; minimum benefit $24). The max … Read more

Single Parent Benefits by State (2025): Cash, Food & Housing

Quick answer: what single parents can get (and how to find your state) Every state offers a bundle of help for single-parent households: cash (TANF), food (SNAP, WIC), housing (Section 8/Public Housing), child care (CCDF), phone/internet (Lifeline), and tax credits (EITC/CTC/CDCC). The fastest way is to open the official directories below and click your state—then … Read more