Children and Investment Income

Due to the kiddie tax, a child’s investment income can be taxed at his or her parents’ marginal tax rate. This means that if your child has investment income that totals more than $1,900, some of it will be taxed at your tax rate.

This rule applies to children who have more than $1,900 of investment income and at least one living parent and are under age 18 at the end of the year or under age 24 at the end of the year if they are a full-time student. Of course, if your child’s tax rate happens to be higher than yours, then your child pays tax at the higher rate. For details, see What Is the Kiddie Tax?

You can report a child’s investment income on either your tax return (if certain conditions apply) or your child’s tax return. If your child has earned income or sale of stock (reported on Form 1099-B), you must file a separate return for your child.

The advantages of filing a separate return for your child include the following:

When you report your child’s investment income on your return, you must file Form 8615 with your return. If the child files his or her own return and the kiddie tax applies, Form 8615 must be filed with the child's return. Our Child with Investments interview topic will walk you through it.

For more information, see Publication 929: Tax Rules for Children and Dependents.