The Nevada child support calculator generally requires multiplying the parent's gross monthly income by a percentage based on the number of children. When the parent's gross monthly income (GMI) is $1,700 to $6,000, those percentages are: 16% for one child. 22% for two children.
The amounts are as follows: One child: – 16% of income up to $60,000; 8% of income from $60,000-$100,000; 4% of income over $100,000. Two children: – 22% of income up to $60,000; 11% of income from $60,000-$100,000; 6% of income over $100,000.
The credit currently provides up to $3,600 per child and has benefited more than 160,000 families in Nevada, ing to lawmakers.
Osburn (1998), the Court decided that when parents have 50/50 custody, you calculate support for each parent and then offset the two amounts – the higher-earning parent pays the difference to the other parent. In Wesley v.
A dependent must be a U.S. citizen, resident alien or national or a resident of Canada or Mexico. A person can't be claimed as a dependent on more than one tax return, with rare exceptions. A dependent can't claim a dependent on their own tax return.
(updated Aug. 2, 2022) In general, you can claim qualifying individuals as your dependents. To be your dependent, the qualifying individual must be a U.S. citizen, U.S. national, U.S. resident alien, or a resident of Canada or Mexico for some part of the calendar year in which your tax year begins.