Bill
Bill > A577
NJ A577
NJ A577Provides gross income tax credit for certain expenses paid or incurred for care and support of qualifying senior family member; designated as Caregiver's Assistance Act.
summary
Introduced
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
2026-2027 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill, designated as the Caregiver's Assistance Act, provides a gross income tax credit to qualified caregivers, including resident taxpayers and resident individuals, who pay or incur qualified care expenses for the care and support of a qualifying senior family member. The bill provides that to be allowed a credit qualified caregivers who pay or incur qualified care expenses must have gross income that does not exceed an annual income limitation. The bill specifies that qualified caregivers must have gross income that does not exceed $100,000, or does not exceed $50,000 if married or a civil union partner filing separately or if unmarried, not a partner in a civil union, and not filing or eligible to file as head of household or as a surviving spouse for federal income tax purposes, to be allowed the credit. The bill provides that the amount of the credit is equal to 22.5 percent of the qualified care expenses paid or incurred by the qualified caregiver during the taxable year for the care and support of a qualifying senior family member that are not in excess of $3,000. The bill provides that if multiple qualified caregivers are allowed a credit for qualified care expenses of the same qualifying senior family member, the credit allowed will be allocated in equal amounts unless a different allocation is established by agreement. The bill provides that the credit is in addition to the benefit of the dependent deduction that may be received by the qualified caregiver for claiming the qualifying senior family member as a dependent on the caregiver's gross income tax return. The bill provides that the credit is refundable: the amount of any credit that reduces the qualified caregiver's tax liability to an amount less than zero is required to be refunded to the caregiver as an overpayment of tax. The bill provides that a qualified caregiver is eligible to receive the benefits of the credit, even if the caregiver has gross income below the statutory minimum subject to tax. The bill defines a qualifying senior family member as an individual who: (1) is 60 years of age or older and a relative of the qualified caregiver, or is 50 years of age or older, is a relative of the qualified caregiver, and qualifies for Social Security Disability Insurance, and (2) has gross income for the taxable year not in excess of the New Jersey Elder Index, as reported by the Department of Human Services pursuant to P.L.2015, c.53 (C.44:15-1 et seq.) for the most recent calendar year. The bill generally defines qualified care expenses as the expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year for the purchase, lease, or rental of tangible personal property and services that are necessary to allow the qualifying senior family member to be maintained within or at the qualified caregiver's or the qualifying senior family member's permanent place of abode in this State.
AI Summary
This bill, known as the Caregiver's Assistance Act, establishes a gross income tax credit for eligible caregivers who incur expenses for the care and support of a qualifying senior family member. A "qualified caregiver" is a resident of the state providing this care, and a "qualifying senior family member" is an individual aged 60 or older who is a relative, or aged 50 or older, a relative, and eligible for Social Security Disability Insurance, with income not exceeding the New Jersey Elder Index. "Qualified care expenses" are those necessary for the senior to live in their home or the caregiver's home, excluding expenses reimbursed by insurance or government programs. The credit is 22.5% of qualified expenses, up to a maximum of $3,000 in expenses, and is subject to income limitations for the caregiver: $100,000 for single filers or $50,000 for those married filing separately or unmarried and not filing as head of household. If multiple caregivers care for the same senior, the credit is split equally unless they agree otherwise. Importantly, this credit is in addition to any dependent deduction a caregiver might claim and is refundable, meaning any unused credit will be returned to the taxpayer as an overpayment, even if their income is too low to owe taxes. This act takes effect immediately and applies to taxable years beginning on or after January 1st of the year following its enactment.
Committee Categories
Health and Social Services
Sponsors (15)
Gary Schaer (D)*,
Alaa Abdelaziz (D),
Clinton Calabrese (D),
Margie Donlon (D),
Aura Dunn (R),
Vicky Flynn (R),
Don Guardian (R),
Ellen Park (D),
Verlina Reynolds-Jackson (D),
Alex Sauickie (R),
Gerry Scharfenberger (R),
Bill Spearman (D),
Shanique Speight (D),
Lisa Swain (D),
Chris Tully (D),
Last Action
Introduced, Referred to Assembly Aging and Human Services Committee (on 01/13/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/A577 |
| BillText | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A1000/577_I1.HTM |
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