When Must a Dependent File Their Own Tax Return
Question: When does a dependent need to file their own tax return?
Quick answer: A dependent must file their own 2025 tax return if their earned income, unearned income, or total gross income exceeds certain thresholds set by the IRS — the exact numbers depend on whether the dependent is single or married, and whether they're 65+ or blind.
Explanation:
A "dependent" here means someone who can be claimed as a dependent on another person's return (usually a parent). Even though they're a dependent, they may still owe tax and have their own filing obligation. As IRS Publication 501 explains, a person who is a dependent may still have to file a return, depending on the person's earned income, unearned income, and gross income.
For a single dependent under 65 and not blind (2025 tax year), you must file a return if your unearned income was more than $1,350, your earned income was more than $15,750, or your gross income was more than the larger of $1,350, or your earned income (up to $15,300) plus $450.
If that single dependent is 65 or older or blind, the thresholds rise: you must file if your unearned income was more than $3,350 ($5,350 if 65 or older and blind), your earned income was more than $17,750 ($19,750 if 65 or older and blind), or your gross income was more than the larger of $3,350 ($5,350 if 65 or older and blind) or your earned income (up to $15,300) plus $2,450 ($4,450 if 65 or older and blind).
For a married dependent under 65 and not blind, you must file if your unearned income was more than $1,350, your earned income was more than $15,750, your gross income was at least $5 and your spouse files a separate return and itemizes deductions, or your gross income was more than the larger of $1,350, or your earned income (up to $15,300) plus $450.
A married dependent 65+ or blind faces higher thresholds: you must file if your unearned income was more than $2,950 ($4,550 if 65 or older and blind), your earned income was more than $17,350 ($18,950 if 65 or older and blind), your gross income was at least $5 and your spouse files a separate return and itemizes deductions, or your gross income was more than the larger of $2,950 ($4,550 if 65 or older and blind) or your earned income (up to $15,300) plus $2,050 ($3,650 if 65 or older and blind).
Key terms: unearned income includes taxable interest, ordinary dividends, and capital gain distributions, unemployment compensation, taxable social security benefits, pensions, annuities, and distributions of unearned income from a trust; earned income includes salaries, wages, tips, professional fees, and taxable scholarship and fellowship grants; and gross income is the total of earned and unearned income.
A dependent may also have to file for other reasons unrelated to these income thresholds — a dependent must also file if one of the situations described in Table 3 applies, which this excerpt doesn't include.
What it depends on:
- Whether the dependent is single or married
- Whether they are 65+ and/or blind
- The mix of earned vs. unearned income
- Special situations in "Table 3" (not shown in these excerpts) — e.g., self-employment tax, certain household employment taxes, etc.
Given how fact-specific these thresholds are, it's worth having a CPA confirm the numbers against the dependent's actual income mix, especially since 2025 brought significant federal tax law changes.
Sources relied upon
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IRS Publication 501 — Dependents, Standard Deduction, and Filing Information, p. 3
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 3) ↗
“Dependents A person who is a dependent may still have to file a return. It depends on the person’s earned income, unearned income, and gross income.”
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IRS Publication 17 — Your Federal Income Tax (Individuals), p. 11
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 11) ↗
“Y ou must file a return if any of the following apply. • Y our unearned income was more than $1,350. • Y our earned income was more than $15,750. • Y our gross income was more than the larger of: • $1,350, or • Y our earned income (up to $15,300) plus $450.”
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IRS Publication 17 — Your Federal Income Tax (Individuals), p. 11
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 11) ↗
“Yes. Y ou must file a return if any of the following apply. • Y our unearned income was more than $3,350 ($5,350 if 65 or older and blind). • Y our earned income was more than $17,750 ($19,750 if 65 or older and blind). • Y our gross income was more than the larger of: • $3,350 ($5,350 if 65 or older and blind), or • Y our earned income (up to $15,300) plus $2,450 ($4,450 if 65 or older and blind)…”
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IRS Publication 17 — Your Federal Income Tax (Individuals), p. 11
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 11) ↗
“Y ou must file a return if any of the following apply. • Y our unearned income was more than $1,350. • Y our earned income was more than $15,750. • Y our gross income was at least $5 and your spouse files a separate return and itemizes deductions. • Y our gross income was more than the larger of: • $1,350, or • Y our earned income (up to $15,300) plus $450.”
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IRS Publication 17 — Your Federal Income Tax (Individuals), p. 11
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 11) ↗
“Y ou must file a return if any of the following apply. • Y our unearned income was more than $2,950 ($4,550 if 65 or older and blind). • Y our earned income was more than $17,350 ($18,950 if 65 or older and blind). • Y our gross income was at least $5 and your spouse files a separate return and itemizes deductions. • Y our gross income was more than the larger of: • $2,950 ($4,550 if 65 or older a…”
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IRS Publication 17 — Your Federal Income Tax (Individuals), p. 11
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 11) ↗
“In this table, unearned income includes taxable interest, ordinary dividends, and capital gain distributions. It also includes unemployment compensation, taxable social security benefits, pensions, annuities, and distributions of unearned income from a trust. Earned income includes salaries, wages, tips, professional fees, and taxable scholarship and fellowship grants.”
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IRS Publication 17 — Your Federal Income Tax (Individuals), p. 11
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 11) ↗
“Gross income is the total of your earned and unearned income.”
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IRS Publication 501 — Dependents, Standard Deduction, and Filing Information, p. 3
· see it highlighted in context
· official source (p. 3) ↗
“For details, see T able 2. A dependent must also file if one of the situations described in T able 3 applies.”
Quoted passages are extracted verbatim from the source documents by the citation system — they cannot be fabricated by the AI.
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