Law to lower adoption costs
Published 9:32 am Monday, May 24, 2010
Tucked into the 2,000-page federal health care law is a provision designed to help parents defray some of the costs of adoption. The law increases the federal adoption tax credit by about $1,000 to more than $13,000 for the costs of finalizing a domestic or foreign adoption.
It also aims to help lower income families adopt. The credit was due to end this year until the new health care law extended it until December 2011.
The one-time adoption credit was a huge help for Christine and Brian Daves of Minneapolis, who adopted their son Elliot from Korea in 2006, when he was four months old.
They decided to adopt because they had a family history of some medical problems. Christine Daves, 36, said the cost of Elliot’s adoption totaled nearly $35,000.
“It’s just amazing how many little expenses there are,” Daves said. “Getting his certificate of citizenship was another $200; getting the background checks are another couple hundred here and couple hundred there. And throughout the process of it, I kind of got to the point where it was, you know, it’s just another check, and it’s just part of it and it adds up a lot.”
Finalizing an adoption can be very expensive. The Children’s Home Society of Minnesota, which facilitated the Daves’ adoption, says expenses typically average between $25,000 and $35,000. Last year the society helped complete 581 foreign and domestic adoptions.
In 1996 with the support of President Bill Clinton and House Republicans, Congress passed a tax credit to encourage adoptions, particularly foster care adoptions. But the tax credit is available for all legal adoptions. It’s helped families like the Daves recoup some of their adoption-related costs including fees; attorney and court costs; and traveling expenses.
“While the tax credit doesn’t make people adopt, it helps people who want to adopt, adopt sooner,” said Kim Herman, a community relations specialist for the Children’s Home Society of Minnesota.
“When it’s explained to them that some of the costs can be defrayed through this credit, it really helps them make that decision and have that child home sooner then they thought was possible,” Herman said.
The credit was due to expire this December but Democrats who oppose abortion pushed to include it in the health reform legislation. The new law also raised the credit about $1,000 to $13,170.
The credit now includes a key change that some hope will allow lower-income parents to use it. The full credit is available for those with adjusted gross incomes up to about $180,000.
Critics have argued that it “largely” benefited those with higher incomes — couples with a taxable income of $80,000 or more — because families could get back as much in credit as they paid in tax that year. Those with lower incomes paid less in taxes and couldn’t claim the full credit. They had to carry over the rest in the next tax years. But under the new law, even adoptive parents that pay no tax at the end of the year will receive the credit as a tax refund.
Adam Pertman, executive director of the Evan B. Donaldson Adoption Institute, a non-partisan policy and research group based in New York, said making the credit refundable is a move in the right direction. But he said lower-income families who want to adopt need funding help up front.
“A credit comes after you’ve already paid. So you were already able to afford that sum of money in the first place. So what it doesn’t do is allow people who don’t have resources, to gain resources with which to adopt.”
The credit is due to expire at the end of 2011. Some adoption advocates say they’ll push for Congress to pass new legislation that will extend the credit indefinitely, since many adoptions can take years to complete.