TCJA Sunsets in 2026: What Seniors & Single Parents Must Know

TCJA Sunsets in 2026: Essential guide for seniors and single parents

Most TCJA individual tax cuts expire after Dec. 31, 2025. In 2026, rates likely rise, the standard deduction shrinks, personal exemptions return, the Child Tax Credit drops to $1,000 with lower phaseouts, the SALT cap disappears but Pease returns, 199A ends, and the estate exclusion halves. Details and action steps below. Quick answer: what actually … Read more

Get Paid as a Family Caregiver: State-by-State Guide

Yes, you can get paid to care for a family member in many states. The fastest routes are Medicaid self-directed care, VA caregiver stipends, state paid family & medical leave, and state vouchers. Use the map-style table below to check your state, then follow the step-by-step section to start payments. NCSL+3medicaid.gov+3medicaid.gov+3 Quick answer: 4 ways … Read more

Incontinence Supplies for Seniors: What to Buy & Save On

If you’re caring for a senior with leaks, the fastest wins are choosing the right product for the right time of day and tapping every benefit available. Below we show exactly which supplies work best (day vs. night), how to prevent skin breakdown, and the smartest ways to cut monthly costs—including coverage options. Quick answer: … Read more

Can an Ex Claim Your Child This Year? What to Do Now

Yes—but only one return wins. IRS tie-breaker rules decide: more overnights wins; if exactly equal, the parent with the higher AGI wins. If your e-file rejects because your child was already claimed, don’t panic—paper file with proof and follow the steps below, including whether Form 8862 or identity protection applies. IRS Apps Who actually wins? … Read more

Shared Custody, Shared Credits? How the IRS Sees 50/50

In a true 50/50 custody year, the IRS doesn’t let both parents claim the same child. The tie-breaker rule awards the child to one parent—if overnight time is exactly equal, the win goes to the parent with the higher AGI. Private “alternating years” deals don’t override this if both file. IRS+1 The tie-breaker rule in … Read more

After You Break Up: Can You Still File Head of Household?

Yes, if you pass all three HOH tests. After a breakup, you can still file Head of Household when you are unmarried (or “considered unmarried”), you paid over half the cost of keeping up your home, and you had a qualifying person living with you long enough. Here’s how the IRS actually decides it. Source: … Read more

SNAP for Single-Parent Households: What to Know Before You Apply

Your SNAP outcome hinges on three things: who’s in your household, what counts as income/resources, and how EBT benefits work at the store. Nail those up front and your application goes smoother—with fewer requests for more info. This guide gives single parents the plain-English version, with direct USDA references. Source: USDA FNS. Food and Nutrition … Read more

FAFSA for Single Parents: Which Parent’s Income Counts?

On today’s FAFSA, the parent of record is the parent who provided more financial support to the student in the last 12 months—not necessarily where the student lived. If support is truly equal, use the parent with the greater income/assets. If that parent is remarried, the stepparent’s information is included, too. Federal Student Aid+1 The … Read more

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

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