Families with minor children, or a disabled adult member, may claim the full amount of the cost for child care or care of a disabled adult while the household member is working, attending education or training programs, or looking for work. 106 C.M.R. § 364.400(D). The 2008 federal Farm Bill eliminated the cap on dependent care expenses.
This includes the cost for supervision of teenage children (under 18), as well as the care of a child or disabled adult that is not part of your SNAP/food stamp household (for example, a foster child or non-citizen child).
You can self-declare your dependent care expenses by writing the expenses on your signed SNAP/food stamp application or recertification form. You can also send DTA a separate signed statement. See the FAQ and sample self-declaration form in Appendix C: Child Care Flier and Self-Declaration Form. You do not need a statement from the child care provider.
DTA can ask for more verification if the information you provide about your dependent care costs is determined "questionable"— meaning inconsistent with other statements on your application or in the interview, or information known to DTA. 106 C.M.R. § 361.620. For example, it might be questionable if you claim child care costs significantly higher than the going rate, or the hours of care billed for are significantly higher child care hours than your work hours and commuting hours. In such circumstances, DTA may request more verification.
If you need to pay for care for a disabled adult so you can work or go to training, you can claim this as a dependent care cost. If a disabled member of your household pays for adult care for any reason unrelated to your needing to work, DTA will likely treat these costs as medical expenses instead, assuming the disability criteria are met. 106 C.M.R. § 364.400(C)(12). See 52. What deductions are allowed against my income?