Today is Child Tax Credit Awareness Day

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Explore Child Tax Credit and Payments to Parents and Caregivers

If you’re a parent or caregiver who has filed taxes before, you may already be familiar with the child tax credit, which most parents claim on their annual income tax return. For years, it has provided an after-the-fact credit for families with children.

What’s new is that beginning in July 2021, for most parents, half of your credit will be advanced to you during the year in the form of direct bank account payments, so you don’t have to wait until it’s time to file your taxes to make use of these resources to provide for you and your family. This is the “advance” child tax credit you might have heard about in the news. You’ll still get the other half of your credit the usual way, as part of filing your federal taxes next April.

When Do Payments Start? How Much Are They For?

The payments begin July 15. You’ll receive one per month. For each qualifying child age 5 or younger, most parents will receive $300 per month in July, August, September, October, November, and December for a total of $1,800. For each qualifying child ages 6 to 17, most parents will receive $250 each month for a total of $1,500. The benefit is time-limited.

How Do I Receive These Payments to Provide for My Family?

Most parents and caregivers won’t have to do anything. Eligibility is based on last year’s tax information and almost all parents are eligible. If the IRS already has your information on file from when you’ve received tax refunds or stimulus payments, the advance child tax credit should appear in your account automatically. If it doesn’t, visit childtaxcredit.gov to find out what to do next.

There’s a special website for parents and caregivers who are eligible, but who did not file taxes last year. It’s called the Non-filer Sign-up Tool.

Why Are These Payments Being Made?

It costs almost a quarter million dollars to raise one child in the United States from birth to age 18. And the COVID-19 pandemic brought new uncertainty and instability to parents trying to make ends meet. America doesn’t recover unless American families recover, so the advance child tax credit was included in the American Rescue Plan as one tool to provide families with the support they need to care for their children and to power an equitable economic recovery.

Where Can I Learn More?

Visit the U.S. government’s official child tax credit site for more information: childtaxcredit.gov.

The Annie E. Casey Foundation covers this topic in its national 2021 KIDS COUNT Data Book released today.


Contact:

Bill Valladares
GaFCP Communications Director
404-739-0043
william@gafcp.org

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Georgia Family Connection Partnership (GaFCP) is a public-private partnership created by the State of Georgia and investors from the private sector to assist communities in addressing the serious challenges facing children and families. GaFCP also serves as a resource to state agencies across Georgia that work to improve the conditions of children and families. Georgia KIDS COUNT provides policymakers and citizens with current data they need to make informed decisions regarding priorities, services, and resources that impact Georgia’s children, youth, families, and communities. Georgia KIDS COUNT is funded, in part, through a grant from The Annie E. Casey Foundation, a private charitable organization dedicated to helping build better futures for disadvantaged children in the United States.

The Annie E. Casey Foundation creates a brighter future for the nation’s children by developing solutions to strengthen families, build paths to economic opportunity and transform struggling communities into safer and healthier places to live, work and grow. KIDS COUNT® is a registered trademark of the Annie E. Casey Foundation.