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We have a service that provides a person to come stay with Mom 3 days a week for 5 hours so she can bath, etc. Is this tax deductible?

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Best to check with your tax preparer. Also, there is a legal/financial reference on this site that you can go to. They probably have answered question before. You will get best guidance from there.
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This has been a deduction for my parents for all the years they have had the service. But you have to have detailed records, no payments "under the table".
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Probably not. Look on www.IRS.gov.
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Unless care is medically necessary (like that of a skilled nurse, RN or maybe LPN) it's not legally deductible as a medical expense. Help with bathing, housework, etc. is not deductible. GrandmaLynn's parents may have been taking a deduction for it and not getting audited (caught); but that's not the IRS rule.
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Everyone else gave good answers. I just want to point out that there are no refunds, no matter if the expenses are deductible, if no taxes were paid into the IRS to start with. In other words, if all the income is social security, or a small retirement....and it's not taxable income, then the standard deduction is going to mean that no matter how much more you have in medical, it makes no difference in terms of a refund. I just went over my parents back taxes for 2013. They cashed in some large investments, so that over $90,000 could be paid out in medical for private pay memory care and lots of other stuff. NO REFUND beause, even with adding in the taxes on the investments we closed out, the total income with SS and retirement didn't permit paying any taxes, so no deductions were allowed past the standard. No taxes due....and no refunds allowed.
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Keep detailed records of all expenses, even medical, such as OTC tylenol, prilosec, etc.
If not for taxes, when applying for Medicaid, there is a Medi-Cal portion to qualify for. Your parent's income might be just a bit too high to qualify.
In that case, the Medi-Cal portion takes that income and decreases it by your medical expenses. That decrease can be just enough to qualify for Medicaid.
Disclaimer: Hope I got this right, because no one tells you about it in advance, you may need a lawyer that specializes in benefits counseling.

Back to the OP's question about taxes......
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The poster's income tax return should be relatively simple. In order to claim medical (expenses) it #1 must be an itemized return and #2 must be above 10% of AGI.
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sounds like a medical expense to me.
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It can be a Deduction when a lot of qualifications or conditions are met. Some include doctor's diagnoses, guardianship, family vs professional paid care, etc.. There is even in a new bill that covers family caretakers to be paid if they work. Try to read articles from all sources before your seek an one "expert's" recommendations.
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