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May 6, 2020
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The education tax credit can only be used if itemizing, is that correct? Secondly, what if we paid for his expenses in 2019 but school did not start till Jan 2020?

  • May 6, 2020
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Best answer by DoninGA

Whether you use the Standard Deduction or Itemized Deductions on your federal tax return is not relevant for being able to receive Education Credits.  Payment of education expenses in 2019 for the first quarter 2020 tuition is allowed on your 2019 tax return.

 

To enter, edit or delete Education Expenses -

  • Click on Federal Taxes (Personal using Home and Business)
  • Click on Deductions and Credits
  • Click on I'll choose what I work on (if shown)
  • Scroll down to Education
  • On Expenses and Scholarships (Form 1098-T), click on the start or update button

Or enter education expenses in the Search box located in the upper right of the program screen. Click on Jump to education expenses

2 replies

DoninGA
DoninGAAnswer
Employee
May 6, 2020

Whether you use the Standard Deduction or Itemized Deductions on your federal tax return is not relevant for being able to receive Education Credits.  Payment of education expenses in 2019 for the first quarter 2020 tuition is allowed on your 2019 tax return.

 

To enter, edit or delete Education Expenses -

  • Click on Federal Taxes (Personal using Home and Business)
  • Click on Deductions and Credits
  • Click on I'll choose what I work on (if shown)
  • Scroll down to Education
  • On Expenses and Scholarships (Form 1098-T), click on the start or update button

Or enter education expenses in the Search box located in the upper right of the program screen. Click on Jump to education expenses

Carl11_2
Employee
May 8, 2020

A few things first.

Understand there is a difference between a credit, and a deduction.

CREDIT - Reduces your tax liability dollar for dollar. So if you have a tax liability of $5000 and qualify for the maximum American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) of $2,500, that reduces your tax liability to $2,500.

DEDUCTION - Reduces your taxable income dollar for dollar. So if you have $100,000 of taxable income taxed at 20%, that means your tax liability on that amount is $20,000. But if you have a $10,000 *deduction* that reduces your taxable income to $90,000. If taxed at 20% that means your tax liability is only $18,000 on that $90,000.

Neither of the above have anything to do with weather you itemize deductions or take the standard deduction.

what if we paid for his expenses in 2019 but school did not start till Jan 2020?

Was he a student "at any school" in 2019? For example, if he was still attending high school in 2019, then it's a fact that he was a student that was enrolled full time for at least one semester at a qualified institution and was pursuing a course of study that would lead to a degree or credentialed certification.

 - High school is an accredited institution.

 - He was enrolled as a full time student in high school

 - He did attend high school in 2019 for at at least one semester, and that semester started in 2019.

 - He did graduate high school and get a diploma, which is a "credentialed certification."

Now for the below, please read it through at least three times. The first time, read it all just to "soak it in". The second time you read it, put a line through those things that do not apply to your specific and explicit situation. Then the third time read only what you have not marked through, as that's all that applies to your specific and explicit situation.

College Education Expenses

Colleges work in academic years, while the IRS works in calendar years. So the reality is, it takes you 5 calendar years to get that 4 year degree. With that said:

 - Scholarships and grants are claimed/reported as taxable income (initially) in the year they are received. It does not matter what year that scholarship or grant is *for*

- Tuition and other qualified education expenses are reported/claimed in the tax year they are paid. It does not matter what year they pay *for*.

Understand that figuring out who claims the student as a dependent, and determining who claims the education expenses & credits, is two different determinations. It depends on the specific situation as outlined below. After you read it, I have also attached a chart at the bottom. You can click on the chart to enlarge it so you can read it. If it’s still to hard to read on your screen then right-click on the enlarged image and elect to save it to your computer. Then you can double-click the saved image file on your computer to open it, and it will be even easier to read.

Here’s the general rules gisted from IRS Publication 970 at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p970.pdf Some words are in bold, italicized, or capitalized just for emphasis. This is because correct interpretation by the reader is everything. Take the below contents LITERALLY, and do not try to “read between the lines”. If you do, you’ll interpret it incorrectly and risk reporting things wrong on your taxes. For example, there is a vast difference between “can be claimed” and “must be claimed”.  The first one indicates a choice. The second one provides no choice.

Now there are two separate determinations to be made here.

  • Who claims the student as a dependent.
  • Who reports all the education expenses and claims all the education credits.

 

First, who claims the student as a dependent?

If the student:

Is under the age of 24 on Dec 31 of the tax year and:

Is enrolled in an undergraduate program at an accredited institution and:

Is enrolled as a full time student for any one academic semester that begins during the tax year, (each institution has their own definition of a full time student) and:

the STUDENT did NOT provide more that 50% of the STUDENT’S support (schollarships/grants received by the student ***do not count*** as the student providing their own support)

Then:

The parents qualify to claim the student as a dependent on the parent's tax return . Period, End of Story. But one thing I want to point out here. The parents *QUALIFY* to claim the student. The parents are *NOT* required to claim the student as a dependent. But even if they don’t, since they *qualify* to claim the student, then if the student will be filing their own tax return the student is *REQUIRED* to select the option for “I can be claimed on someone else’s return”.  To reiterate:

If the student qualifies to be claimed on the parent’s tax return, then the student can not take the self-exemption on their own tax return, no …matter…what.

 

Who reports all the education expenses and claims all the credits?

If (and only if) the parents qualify to claim the student as a dependent, *and* the parents actually are claiming the student as a dependent, then:

The parents will claim all schollarships, grants, tuition payments, and the student's 1098-T on the parent's tax return and:

The parents will claim all educational tax credits that qualify.

If the student will be filing a tax return and:

The parents qualify to claim the student as a dependent, then:

The student must select the option for "I can be claimed on someone else's return", on the student's tax return. The student must select this option even f the parent's qualify to claim the student as a dependent, and the parents do not claim them.

 

Here’s when the parents will claim the student as a dependent, but the parents will NOT claim any of the education expenses or report the 1098-T on the parent’s tax return.

 

.If the amount of scholarships/grants/529 funds exceeds the amount of qualified education expenses,  then the student will report the education stuff on the student’s tax return. The parent will know this when reporting the education on their tax return, because the parent will not qualify for any of the tax credits. (They only qualify for tax credits based on out-of-pocket qualified expenses not covered by scholarships/grants.)  Also, the parent’s will not qualify for the credits depending on their MAGI which is different for each credit, and depends on the marital status of the parent or parents.

In the case where scholarships/grants covers “all” qualified education expenses, the parent’s don’t need to report educational information on their dependent student at all – but they still claim the student as a dependent if they “qualify” to claim the student.

 If the scholarships/grants exceed the qualified education expenses, then the student will report the 1098-T and all other educational expenses and scholarships/grants on the student’s tax return. The student will pay taxes on the amount of scholarships/grants that are not used for qualified education expenses. However, if the student’s investment income exceeds $1,050 or if the student’s earned income when added to the excess scholarships/grants does NOT exceed $12,350 for the 2019 tax year, then the student doesn’t even need to file a tax return, and nothing has to be reported.

If the student has any other taxable income not reported on a W-2, and it exceeds $400, (not including taxable portion of scholarships/grants) then most likely it’s considered self-employment income. That will require a tax return to be filed and the student will have to pay the Self-Employment tax on that income.

Finally, regardless of the student’s W-2 earnings, if any taxes were withheld on those earnings and it was less than $12,350, then the student should file a tax return so as to get those withheld taxes refunded.

 

1099-Q Funds

 First, scholarships & grants are applied to qualified education expenses. The only qualified expenses for scholarships and grants are tuition, books, and lab fees. that's it. If there is any excess, then it's taxable income. It automatically gets transferred to and included in the total on line 7 of the 1040.

Next, 529/Coverdell funds reported on 1099-Q are applied to qualified education expenses. The qualified expenses for 1099-Q funds are tuition, books, lab fees, AND room & board. That's it. If there are any excess 1099-Q funds they are taxable. The amount is included in the total on line 7..

Finally, out of pocket money is applied to qualified education expenses

When you have a 1099-Q it is extremely important that you work through the education section of the program in the order it is designed and intended to be used. If you do not, then there is a high probability that you will not be asked for room & board expenses, and you could therefore be TAXED on your 1099-Q funds.

Finally, if "all" qualified expenses are covered by scholarships, grants, 1099-Q funds and there is ANY of those funds left over, the left over excess is taxable. While the parent can still claim the student as a dependent, it is the student who will report all the education stuff on the student's tax return. That's because the STUDENT pays the taxes on any excess scholarships, grants and 1099-Q funds.

March 7, 2022

In your post you state: 

- Tuition and other qualified education expenses are reported/claimed in the tax year they are paid. It does not matter what year they pay *for*.

What if the school bills the Spring tuition in December so that is the year they report it on the 1098-T. However we do not pay it until January. And the scholarship was awarded in January. So the student's last 1098-T shows two semesters of scholarship amounts but only one semester of tuition. All of the scholarship monies was given directly to school and paid for tuition only.

Turbo Tax is indicating that this is taxable income for the student. Does my student have to pay taxes on this scholarship that paid for tuition?

 

Thank you for your help!

March 7, 2022

If you paid for 2021 tuition in 2022, you can’t use the amount paid in 2022 to compute the student’s qualified education expenses for the 2021 education credit.  Please see the Caution under Prepaid Expenses in the 2021 Instructions for Form 8863

Are you saying that the scholarship amount reported on the 1098-T spans two tax years?    

Please see the TurboTax Help article Why is my scholarship taxable? for additional information.

@nburgdorf