A single mother fights an exhausting battle to secure what is rightfully hers and her children’s—a struggle that is as emotional as it is bureaucratic. Despite an agreement designed to protect her family, she faces the cold reality of broken promises and financial neglect, forced to navigate a maze of legal and administrative hurdles just to claim what she deserves.
Her strength is tested when the system seems to side with absence and arrears rather than fairness and responsibility. Yet, through unwavering determination and resilience, she stands firm, refusing to be silenced or sidelined, embodying the fierce love and relentless courage that motherhood demands.

AITA for informing the IRS my ex intentionally (incorrectly) claimed our child?









Dr. Gail Saltz, a clinical associate professor of psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College, often discusses the psychology of conflict resolution in co-parenting, emphasizing the need for clear boundaries and adherence to legal structures to maintain stability for children.
The core issue here involves the intersection of legal obligation (child support) and contractual agreement (the dependency exemption). The father’s failure to pay the $6,000 in support constituted a significant breach of the overall parenting plan, even if the tax dependency clause was separate. The mother’s motivation appears rooted in self-protection and ensuring financial provision for her children, as she relies on the full support payment. By exercising her right to claim the dependent based on the agreement, she acted within her rights, especially after the father violated the prerequisite (current support payments). Her action of informing the IRS was a necessary step to correct an improper filing that financially disadvantaged her.
The father’s reaction—ceasing communication—is a common avoidance tactic often seen when individuals face accountability for financial failures. The mother acted appropriately by prioritizing the financial security of her children over maintaining a fragile peace with the father, especially when the father was already using selective communication and dismissing her financial needs. Moving forward, the mother should ensure all future agreements regarding tax dependency are explicitly tied to the timely fulfillment of support payments, perhaps seeking a court order to clarify the dependency rights contingent upon current payment status, thus removing ambiguity.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.



He had zero right to claim the children, you went after what was rightfully yours. You had agreed that he could claim one child as long as he kept up with paying child support on time.


Your ex fucked around, playing stupid games, and found out by winning -$6,000 in prizes. He’s a walking, talking example of why those phrases exist. You warned him and have nothing to feel badly about. Hopefully he’ll get current on those payments before this happens again!



![[deleted] NTA](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/14b5c3e09c6d5f006ebcb372d59bb968.png)
You wouldn’t have had to inform the IRS if he didn’t file a false claim preventing you from filing a legitimate one. What did he think would happen? They would just let you both claim the same child? His not speaking with you sounds like a bonus though.

I have this discussion with clients all the time. If you have the valid claim (and it sounds like you do – certainly the IRS seems to agree so) then you file for it. That’s all you have to do.






The mother faced a difficult situation where a financial agreement with the ex-partner was broken due to unpaid child support. Her decision to legally pursue the tax claim reflected a need to secure necessary funds for her children, directly challenging the ex-partner’s non-compliance with court-ordered obligations.
Given the breach of the support agreement, was the mother justified in enforcing the original clause regarding tax dependency, or did the prior agreement obligate her to maintain the status quo until a formal modification was secured?







