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H&R Block Final Review | 2025/2026 | Complete Exam Guide with A+ Verified Answers

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This extensive exam guide covers all final review questions and correct answers for the H&R Block Income Tax Course for the 2025/2026 academic year. It addresses detailed scenarios related to qualifying dependents, filing statuses, the Earned Income Credit (EIC), Child Tax Credit (CTC), head of household eligibility, tiebreaker rules, joint returns, support tests, AGI phaseouts, and dependency exemptions. Includes real-world examples and explanations to ensure full comprehension for tax professionals and preparers. Keywords: qualifying child qualifying relative gross income test support test joint return rule head of household EIC eligibility child tax credit Form 8332 dependency exemption tiebreaker rules filing statuses resident alien married filing separately earned income AGI phaseout custodial parent noncustodial parent dependent care credit qualifying widow student dependency foreign earned income exclusion

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H&R block income tax course
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H&R block income tax course

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Uploaded on
January 16, 2026
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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H&R Block Final Review 2025/2026 Exam
Questions and Answers | A+ Score
Assured



Tony (28) and Adam (27) are cousins and lived in the same home

throughout 2017. Adam only earned $2,500 in 2017. Tony earned $25,000

in 2017.




What test does he meet? - 🧠 ANSWER ✔✔Adam meets the relationship

and member of household test for Tony, since Adam lived with Tony the

entire year.

Tony may be able to claim Adam as a qualifying relative dependent.

,Note: Being cousins alone will not meet the relationship test for qualifying

relative, because a cousin is not listed as a specific relative relationship.

However, a cousin, like other non-relatives, may meet the relationship test

for qualifying relative if the individual lived in the taxpayer's home for the

entire year

Recall Tony-28 $25000 and Adam-27 $2500; cousins from an earlier

example, Tony provided more than half of Adam's support. Adam is not

permanently and totally disabled. Can Tony claim Adam? - 🧠 ANSWER

✔✔Tony may claim Adam as a dependent because he meets all four tests

for qualifying relative.




1. Adam is too old to be someone else's qualifying child

2. Relationship or all year

3. gross income is less than $4,05

4. support

c3 John lives with Robert, his father. John provides 30% of Robert's

support Can he claim Robert?. - 🧠 ANSWER ✔✔John may not claim Robert

as a dependent, because John failed the qualifying relative support test.

, c3 Yolanda lives with her daughter, Elizabeth. Elizabeth is the qualifying

child of Yolanda. Neither Yolanda nor anyone else can claim Elizabeth as

their qualifying relative. Can she claim daughter? - 🧠 ANSWER ✔✔since

Elizabeth meets the definition of a qualifying child

> Relationship, age, residency, support, joint return

c3 Ron (35) and Sue (35) are married and have two children, **Todd (8)

and Tracy (6)**. Neither child has income. Stacy (13), Sue's child from a

previous marriage, came to live with them on July 4, 2017. Prior to moving

in with Ron and Sue, Stacy was supported by and lived with her father.

How many QC and QR? - 🧠 ANSWER ✔✔Todd and Tracy are qualifying

children of Ron and Sue (2 QC). Stacy is neither a qualifying child nor a

qualifying relative of Ron and Sue (0 QR). Because she was supported by

and lived with her father for more than six months, she cannot be a

qualifying child for Sue (residency test) and is not a qualifying relative of

Ron and Sue (qualifying child test).

e3.1 Dale (25) is single. His brother, Jeff (27), lived with him for all of 2017.

Jeff earned $3,100, all from wages, and had no other income. Dale

provided more than half of Jeff's support. Jeff is not permanently or totally




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