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A housekeeper is someone who kept house for you full time and also cared for your dependent child, student (under 21 years old), invalid relative or invalid spouse.
A child-housekeeper is your child who kept house for you full time. Your child includes your adopted child, stepchild, ex-nuptial child or child of your spouse. However a child who is a full-time student or a full-time employee is not considered to keep house full time. (See the full definition of child in Special circumstances and glossary.)
Keeping house means more than simply child-minding or performing domestic duties. It includes having some responsibility for the general running of the household.
quote from http://www.ato.gov.au/content/00313856.htm
If you had a child-housekeeper, you will be eligible to claim this offset if all of the following apply:
your adjusted taxable income was $150,000 or less or, if you had a spouse, your combined adjusted taxable income was $150,000 or less
your child-housekeeper's adjusted taxable income for the year was less than $7,594 or $9,042 if you had another dependent child
you met all the following conditions:
you maintained your child-housekeeper
your child-housekeeper was an Australian resident
you were an Australian resident at any time in 2011-12
you were not eligible for a dependent spouse tax offset
you were not eligible for family tax benefit Part B or were only eligible for it at a shared-care rate. |
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