[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.151-1]

[Page 761-763]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.151-1  Deductions for personal exemptions.

    (a) In general. (1) In computing taxable income, an individual is 
allowed a deduction for the exemptions specified in section 151. Such 
exemptions are: (i) The exemptions for an individual taxpayer and spouse 
(the so-called personal exemptions); (ii) the additional exemptions for 
a taxpayer attaining the age of 65 years and spouse attaining the age of 
65 years (the so-called old-age exemptions); (iii) the additional 
exemptions for a blind taxpayer and a blind spouse; and (iv) the 
exemptions for dependents of the taxpayer.
    (2) A nonresident alien individual who is a bona fide resident of 
Puerto Rico during the entire taxable year and subject to tax under 
section 1 or 1201(b) is allowed as deductions the exemptions specified 
in section 151, even though as to the United States such individual is a 
nonresident alien. See section 876 and the regulations thereunder, 
relating to alien residents of Puerto Rico.
    (b) Exemptions for individual taxpayer and spouse (so-called 
personal exemptions). Section 151(b) allows an exemption for the 
taxpayer and an additional exemption for the spouse of the taxpayer if a 
joint return is not made by the taxpayer and his spouse, and if the 
spouse, for the calendar year in which the taxable year of the taxpayer 
begins, has no gross income and is not the dependent of another 
taxpayer. Thus, a husband is not entitled to an exemption for his wife 
on his separate return for the taxable year beginning in a calendar year 
during which she has any gross income (though insufficient to require 
her to file a return). Since, in the case of a joint return, there are 
two taxpayers (although under section 6013 there is only one income for 
the two taxpayers on such return, i.e., their aggregate income), two 
exemptions are allowed on such return, one for each taxpayer spouse. If 
in any case a joint return is made by the taxpayer and his spouse, no 
other person is allowed an exemption for such spouse even though such 
other person would have been entitled to claim an exemption for such 
spouse as a dependent if such joint return had not been made.
    (c) Exemptions for taxpayer attaining the age of 65 and spouse 
attaining the age of 65 (so-called old-age exemptions). (1) Section 
151(c) provides an additional exemption for the taxpayer if he has 
attained the age of 65 before the close of his taxable year. An 
additional exemption is also allowed to the taxpayer for his spouse if a 
joint return is not made by the taxpayer and his spouse and if the 
spouse has attained the age of 65 before the close of the taxable year 
of the taxpayer and, for the calendar year in which the taxable year of

[[Page 762]]

the taxpayer begins, the spouse has no gross income and is not the 
dependent of another taxpayer. If a husband and wife make a joint 
return, an old-age exemption will be allowed as to each taxpayer spouse 
who has attained the age of 65 before the close of the taxable year for 
which the joint return is made. The exemptions under section 151(c) are 
in addition to the exemptions for the taxpayer and spouse under section 
151(b).
    (2) In determining the age of an individual for the purposes of the 
exemption for old age, the last day of the taxable year of the taxpayer 
is the controlling date. Thus, in the event of a separate return by a 
husband, no additional exemption for old age may be claimed for his 
spouse unless such spouse has attained the age of 65 on or before the 
close of the taxable year of the husband. In no event shall the 
additional exemption for old age be allowed with respect to a spouse who 
dies before attaining the age of 65 even though such spouse would have 
attained the age of 65 before the close of the taxable year of the 
taxpayer. For the purposes of the old-age exemption, an individual 
attains the age of 65 on the first moment of the day preceding his 
sixty-fifth birthday. Accordingly, an individual whose sixty-fifth 
birthday falls on January 1 in a given year attains the age of 65 on the 
last day of the calendar year immediately preceding.
    (d) Exemptions for the blind. (1) Section 151(d) provides an 
additional exemption for the taxpayer if he is blind at the close of his 
taxable year. An additional exemption is also allowed to the taxpayer 
for his spouse if the spouse is blind and, for the calendar year in 
which the taxable year of the taxpayer begins, has no gross income and 
is not the dependent of another taxpayer. The determination of whether 
the spouse is blind shall be made as of the close of the taxable year of 
the taxpayer, unless the spouse dies during such taxable year, in which 
case such determination shall be made as of the time of such death.
    (2) The exemptions for the blind are in addition to the exemptions 
for the taxpayer and spouse under section 151(b) and are also in 
addition to the exemptions under section 151(c) for taxpayers and 
spouses attaining the age of 65 years. Thus, a single individual who has 
attained the age of 65 before the close of his taxable year and who is 
blind at the close of his taxable year is entitled, in addition to the 
so-called personal exemption, to two further exemptions, one by reason 
of his age and the other by reason of his blindness. If a husband and 
wife make a joint return, an exemption for the blind will be allowed as 
to each taxpayer spouse who is blind at the close of the taxable year 
for which the joint return is made.
    (3) A taxpayer claiming an exemption allowed by section 151(d) for a 
blind taxpayer and a blind spouse shall, if the individual for whom the 
exemption is claimed is not totally blind as of the last day of the 
taxable year of the taxpayer (or, in the case of a spouse who dies 
during such taxable year, as of the time of such death), attach to his 
return a certificate from a physician skilled in the diseases of the eye 
or a registered optometrist stating that as of the applicable status 
determination date in the opinion of such physician or optometrist (i) 
the central visual acuity of the individual for whom the exemption is 
claimed did not exceed 20/200 in the better eye with correcting lenses 
or (ii) such individual's visual acuity was accompanied by a limitation 
in the fields of vision such that the widest diameter of the visual 
field subtends an angle no greater than 20 degrees. If such individual 
is totally blind as of the status determination date there shall be 
attached to the return a statement by the person or persons making the 
return setting forth such fact.
    (4) Notwithstanding subparagraph (3) of this paragraph, this 
subparagraph may be applied where the individual for whom an exemption 
under section 151(d) is claimed is not totally blind, and in the 
certified opinion of an examining physician skilled in the diseases of 
the eye there is no reasonable probability that the individual's visual 
acuity will ever improve beyond the minimum standards described in 
subparagraph (3) of this paragraph. In this event, if the examination 
occurs during a taxable year for which the exemption

[[Page 763]]

is claimed, and the examining physician certifies that, in his opinion, 
the condition is irreversible, and a copy of this certification is filed 
with the return for that taxable year, then a statement described in 
subparagraph (3) of this paragraph need not be attached to such 
individual's return for subsequent taxable years so long as the 
condition remains irreversible. The taxpayer shall retain a copy of the 
certified opinion in his records, and a statement referring to such 
opinion shall be attached to future returns claiming the section 151(d) 
exemption.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11402, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 7114, 36 FR 
9018, May 18, 1971; T.D. 7230, 37 FR 28288, Dec. 22, 1972]