The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is one of the largest anti-poverty tax programs in the United States, delivering refundable credits to millions of low- and moderate-income workers each year. For 2026, the maximum credit amounts and income thresholds have been adjusted upward for inflation, making the credit slightly more accessible. If you work and earn below the threshold, you may qualify — and many eligible taxpayers leave this money on the table simply because they do not know they qualify.
What Is the EITC?
The EITC is a refundable tax credit — meaning it can reduce your tax liability to zero and, if the credit exceeds your tax owed, the IRS will pay you the difference as a refund. It is designed to reward work: you must have earned income (wages, self-employment income, or certain disability benefits) to qualify. Investment income, rental income, and Social Security do not count as earned income for this purpose.
2026 EITC Maximum Credit Amounts
| Number of Qualifying Children | 2025 Maximum Credit | 2026 Maximum Credit | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| None (childless workers) | $632 | $649 | +$17 |
| 1 qualifying child | $4,213 | $4,328 | +$115 |
| 2 qualifying children | $6,960 | $7,151 | +$191 |
| 3 or more qualifying children | $7,830 | $8,046 | +$216 |
2026 EITC Income Phase-Out Limits
The EITC begins to phase out above certain income levels. The limits differ based on filing status:
Single, Head of Household, or Qualifying Surviving Spouse
| Number of Children | Earned Income Phase-Out Starts | Maximum Income (Credit = $0) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | $10,620 | $18,591 |
| 1 | $23,350 | $49,084 |
| 2 | $23,350 | $55,768 |
| 3+ | $23,350 | $59,899 |
Married Filing Jointly
| Number of Children | Earned Income Phase-Out Starts | Maximum Income (Credit = $0) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | $17,250 | $25,220 |
| 1 | $30,000 | $55,768 |
| 2 | $30,000 | $62,717 |
| 3+ | $30,000 | $66,819 |
Note: These are projected 2026 figures based on the ~2.8% inflation adjustment applied to 2025 published amounts. The IRS typically publishes final numbers in October or November preceding the tax year.
Investment Income Limit
The EITC has a strict investment income limit. For 2026, the projected limit is $11,950 (up from $11,600 in 2025). If your investment income — including interest, dividends, capital gains, and rental income — exceeds this amount, you cannot claim the EITC regardless of your earned income.
This limit primarily affects self-employed individuals or small business owners who have accumulated some investment assets. For most wage earners, investment income is far below the cap.
Who Qualifies for the EITC?
To claim the EITC, you must:
- Have earned income — from a job, self-employment, or a farm
- Meet income limits — your AGI and earned income must both fall below the phase-out limits
- Be a U.S. citizen or resident alien for the full tax year
- Not file as Married Filing Separately (MFS)
- Have a valid Social Security number (you and any qualifying children)
- Not be claimed as a dependent on someone else’s return
- Be between ages 25 and 64 if claiming without a qualifying child (the age range was expanded under ARPA but the permanent law reverted — verify current rules)
Qualifying Child Rules
A qualifying child for EITC purposes must meet four tests:
- Age: Under 19, or under 24 if a full-time student, or any age if permanently disabled
- Relationship: Your child, stepchild, foster child, sibling, or descendant of any of these
- Residency: Lived with you in the U.S. for more than half the year
- Joint return: Did not file a joint return (unless only to claim a refund)
A child cannot be claimed by more than one taxpayer. If parents are divorced, the custodial parent generally claims the EITC.
The Phase-In and Phase-Out Mechanics
The EITC is not a flat amount — it rises with earned income up to a maximum, then holds steady, and finally phases out as income increases. Understanding this structure helps with planning:
Phase-in zone: As you earn more income, the credit grows. The phase-in rate is approximately 34% for one child (meaning for each additional $100 earned, the credit increases by ~$34, up to the maximum).
Plateau zone: Between the end of the phase-in and the start of the phase-out, the credit stays at its maximum value.
Phase-out zone: Above a threshold, the credit decreases. The phase-out rate is approximately 16–21% depending on filing status and number of children.
This structure means that for some taxpayers at the bottom of the phase-out range, an additional dollar of income reduces the EITC by more than the marginal tax rate on that dollar. This creates an effective marginal rate that is temporarily higher than nominal rates — an important consideration for gig workers managing their income.
Common Mistakes That Disqualify EITC Claims
The EITC has one of the highest error rates of any tax credit, and the IRS audits EITC claims at elevated rates as a result. Common errors:
Claiming a child who does not meet the residency test: The child must have lived with you for more than half the tax year. Grandparents, aunts and uncles often make this mistake.
Forgetting self-employment income: Net self-employment income counts as earned income, but you must report it properly. Failing to include Schedule C income could result in an inaccurate (too high) credit.
Filing as Married Filing Separately: MFS filers are categorically ineligible, even if the credit would otherwise be substantial.
Claiming a child another person is also claiming: If the child’s other parent also claims the EITC, the IRS will flag the duplicate and may disallow the credit for both.
EITC and the Filing Deadline
Unlike most credits, there is no mechanism to claim a prior-year EITC after filing if you missed it on the original return without filing an amended return. If you were eligible for the EITC in a prior year and did not claim it, you can file an amended return (Form 1040-X) within three years of the original filing deadline to claim the credit retroactively.
Key Takeaway
The 2026 EITC delivers up to $8,046 in refundable credits to low- and moderate-income workers with three or more qualifying children. Even workers without children may qualify for up to $649. If your earned income falls within the phase-out ranges and you have not been claiming the EITC, use the IRS’s EITC Assistant tool or a tax professional to verify eligibility. For self-employed filers, tracking net income carefully — and ensuring it is reported accurately — is especially important both for maximizing the credit and avoiding an audit.