Janitor Bob Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 Client had a baby this past January 3rd, 2012. She told me tonight that she wants to take advantage of the "baby grace period". She said that a friend told her (I know...here we go!) that there is a 10-day grace period after you have a baby during which time you can pretend, for tax purposes, that you had the baby on 12/31 Quote
Yardley CPA Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 Baby Grace Period? Nope...no such thing. It's my understanding that the baby needs to be born from January 1 through Dceicember 31 in order to be taken as a dependant.. You should have pretended that you didn't hear your client when they said that. 1 Quote
Pacun Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 Not such an animal. Babies need to be born on Dec 31 or before in order to be claimed. Quote
JohnH Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 I'm pretty sure that baby grace period only applies if your return is prepared by a qualified & licensed hair stylist or auto mechanic. 1 Quote
Jack from Ohio Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 Or prepared on a melting ice pack in the arctic with polar bears as witnesses. Al Gore established the grace period. She will have to get a written statement from him that claiming the baby in 2012 instead of 2011 will create too much carbon dioxide, and the offset credits will pay the additional tax she would have owed. 1 Quote
jainen Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 >>a 10-day grace period<< The problem goes back to Creation. It seems things didn't fit exactly together, so the way the earth spins does not evenly match its orbit around the sun. It's not off by much, but it adds up. In 1582 His Grace Pope Gregory XIII bumped everything forward 10 days. It works out that if your baby was born during the first ten days on the Gregorian calendar, it was within the last ten days on the old calendar from Julius Caesar. The IRS is not allowed to favor one religion over the other, so if you file by April 5th you should be fine. 1 Quote
Trnr395 Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 ha ha nice.....I had this same question last year I think. Crazy what people will believe, client had a friend who took an accounting class once...and as stated by my client "She is very smart with this stuff" love it!! Quote
Jack from Ohio Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 I'm pretty sure that baby grace period only applies if your return is prepared by a qualified & licensed hair stylist or auto mechanic. Don't forget barber or bartender.... Quote
Don in Upstate NY Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 The problem goes back to Creation. It seems things didn't fit exactly together, so the way the earth spins does not evenly match its orbit around the sun. It's not off by much, but it adds up. In 1582 His Grace Pope Gregory XIII bumped everything forward 10 days. It works out that if your baby was born during the first ten days on the Gregorian calendar, it was within the last ten days on the old calendar from Julius Caesar. The IRS is not allowed to favor one religion over the other, so if you file by April 5th you should be fine. And years from now, someone will google this up and the rumor will start afresh ... Quote
jklcpa Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 lol, I thought the original question might be a joke, sorry JB. Anyway, it made my day to see that jainen posted something humorous. I think jainen is wrong on one point though. The Pope should be addresses as "His Holiness". "His Grace" would be appropriate to an archbishop and more than insulting. Does anyone remember when Pres "W" greeted the Pope with "Your Eminence, you're looking well" (title would be used when greeting a Cardinal) or when he said "Thank you, your holiness, awesome speech" ? Quote
jainen Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 >>"His Grace" would be appropriate to an archbishop<< Yes, I did feel uncomfortable writing it that way. But I had to use the word "grace" as part of the joke. I didn't want to make it longer with a whole nother sentence just for the one word, so I took a bit of poetic license. Quote
JohnH Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 Well, "grace" and "license" don't belong in the same sentence either, but that's a whole other paragraph (maybe even a book or two). :) Quote
jainen Posted February 4, 2012 Report Posted February 4, 2012 .."grace" and "license" don't belong in the same sentence<< What do you have against funding for higher education, John? http://www.grace.edu...-license-plates Quote
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