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April 17, 2024
Question

My collect student earned $10,800 in 2023. The MA State return shows they owe taxes. Is this correct? I expected them to be exempt.

  • April 17, 2024
  • 2 replies
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    2 replies

    Employee
    April 17, 2024

    @MA Mom   does your son live in MA or a non-resident? Is he still your legal dependent?

    The MA single exemption is only $4,400 in 2023 plus if he can claim himself and additional $1,000 plus either you or him can claim the tuition deduction

    College Tuition Deduction (Non-residents and part year residents are ineligible for the college tuition deduction)

    Massachusetts allows a deduction for tuition payments paid by taxpayers for themselves, and their dependents who attend a qualifying two or four-year college leading to an undergraduate or associates degree, diploma, or certificate. To qualify as a dependent for purposes of this deduction, the individual must be a “dependent” as defined by Internal Revenue Code (“Code”) § 151(c) as in effect on January 1, 2022.

    The deduction is equal to the amount by which the tuition payments, less any scholarships, grants, or financial aid received, exceed 25% of the taxpayer's Massachusetts adjusted gross income

    **I don't work for TT. Just trying to help. All the best. ***Say "Thanks" by marking as BEST ANSWER and clicking the thumb icon in a post and that I solved your question**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer" I am NOT an expert and you should confirm with a tax expert.
    MA MomAuthor
    April 17, 2024

    Thank you.

    Yes, she lives with us in MA when not on campus.

    We claim her as a dependent - she cannot support 1/2 of her living expenses, which means she cannot claim the Tuition deduction.  In the past we got that deduction, but got a pay raise (yay!) which effectively just netted to nothing because TT is now saying we are not able to claim the Tuition expense deduction. 😞

     

    Seems we're stuck with her owing State taxes, and no one being able to claim the tuition deduction.

    Is there anything I'm missing?

    Employee
    April 18, 2024

    @MA Mom   while you can claim her, you are not required to if there is no benefit.   She can then do the interview saying she can be claimed by someone else but, was not.

     

    If you get no benefits of education credits, there is no reason she can not claim education expenses from the 1098-t and She can get the nonrefundable portion only of the Federal tuition credits.  I'm not sure on MA..

     

    Try it both ways.

    **I don't work for TT. Just trying to help. All the best. ***Say "Thanks" by marking as BEST ANSWER and clicking the thumb icon in a post and that I solved your question**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer" I am NOT an expert and you should confirm with a tax expert.
    Employee
    April 18, 2024

    @MA Mom --

     

    To answer your original question: MA residents are required to file an MA tax return if their gross income from all sources exceeds $8,000.  There is no exemption for students.

    **Answers are correct to the best of my ability but do not constitute tax or legal advice.