Dependent Care Reimbursement Account (DCRA) is a vehicle through which you can accumulate
pre-tax funds to reimburse yourself for childcare expenses or day care expenses for a
disabled dependent while you are employed.
If you are married, you generally will not be able to receive benefits unless
your spouse is employed, a full-time student, or disabled.
In order for a dependent care expense to be reimbursable, the expenses
must be incurred in order to enable you to remain gainfully employed
, and you must include the dependent care provider's Social Security Number if services
are provided by an individual or the provider's Tax ID Number if a day care center of any
type is used.
In order to participate in the DCRA, you need to estimate what your annual expenses will
be for dependent care. Then, set aside that amount from your income by indicating on the
enrollment form how much you wish to have credited each pay period to the DCRA. It is
important to note that depending on your tax bracket, paying for dependent care expenses
with pretax dollars through a DCRA may provide substantial tax savings! You should compare
the tax benefits of this account to the dependent care tax credit currently permitted
under the law.
The dependent care expenses which are eligible for reimbursement include services
provided for: a dependent who is under the age of 13 (i.e. age 12 and under); a dependent
who is physically or mentally incapable of caring for him/herself; or your spouse, if
he/she is physically or mentally incapable of taking care of him or herself.
You MAY NOT include the cost of schooling / tuition or the expenses for sending your
child to an overnight camp. You
will not be reimbursed
for dependent care expenses paid to one of your dependents, your spouse, or one of your
children who is under the age of 19.
To print out a brief information flyer, click
here
.
To access a planning worksheet that will help you determine how much money to set
aside in your Dependent Care Assistance Plan, click
here
.
Kindergarten Notice
The IRS released an information letter on September 7, 2000 that responded to inquiries
regarding whether expenses for kindergarten qualify for the dependent care tax credit
under Code § 21. In this declaration, the IRS confirmed that only expenses that are
primarily for custodial care qualify for the credit, and that kindergarten expenses
are generally for education, not custodial care. The IRS conceded that Treas. Reg. §
1.44A-1, which discusses eligible dependent care expenses, does not specifically mention
kindergarten. However, the regulations do provide that for expenses to be considered for
the care of a qualifying individual, their primary purpose must be to ensure the
individual's "well-being and protection." Amounts paid for kindergarten are primarily
for education, and not primarily for one's well-being and protection. The IRS added that
it was not enough that many parents send their children to kindergarten because they
need some care arrangement in order to be able to work. A program must still be primarily
for custodial care, not education, in order to qualify as an employment-related expense
for the dependent care credit.
To illustrate how kindergarten is treated differently than programs that are primarily
custodial, the IRS provides the example of a child who attends kindergarten in the morning
or an after-school daycare program in the afternoon. The IRS concluded that the portion of
the cost for the kindergarten must be separated from the cost of the after-school care,
and that only the cost for the after-school care could be applied toward the credit
.
View IRS
Publication 503
( Child and Dependent Care Expenses )