Various tax benefits, including tax exemption, tax deferral, tax credits, and deductions, are available if
you are paying or saving for college or other higher education costs. This Guide suggests ways to take
advantage of these benefits.
Many tax benefits are available to help you pay higher education costs, whether for your children or
yourself. Because of the variety of benefits and programs, this area is one of the most complex that an
individual can face. This Financial Guide discusses strategies you can use to build savings for higher
education, and tax credits currently available to help ease the financial burden of paying for
education.
Eligibility rules vary for education credits and savings plans and most are subject to income
limitations.
Related Financial Guide: For more information about saving and investing to cover
education costs, please see the Financial Guide: YOUR CHILD'S EDUCATION: How To Finance
It.
Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (Section 530 Programs)
Starting in 2013, you can contribute up to $2,000 to a Coverdell Education Savings account (a Section 530
program formerly known as an Education IRA) for a child under 18. These contributions are not deductible,
but they grow tax-free until withdrawn. Contributions for any year, for example, 2019, can be made through
the (unextended) due date for the return for that year (April 15, ).
Note: There is no adjustment for inflation; therefore the $2,000 contribution limit is
expected to remain at $2,000 for tax years 2012 and beyond.
Only cash can be contributed to a Section 530 account and you cannot contribute to the account after the
child reaches his or her 18th birthday.
Anyone can establish and contribute to a Section 530 account, including the child. You may establish 530s
for as many children as you wish, but the amount contributed during the year to each account cannot exceed
$2,000. The child need not be a dependent, and, in fact, does not even need to be related to you. The
maximum contribution amount for each child is subject to a phase-out limitation with a modified AGI between
$190,000 and $220,000 for joint filers and $95,000 and $110,000 for single filers.
Note: A 6 percent excise tax (to be paid by the beneficiary) applies to excess
contributions. These are amounts in excess of the applicable contribution limit ($2,000 or phase out
amount) and contributions for a year that amounts are contributed to a qualified tuition program for the
same child. A qualified tuition program (QTP), sometimes called a Section 529 program, is a tax-favored
state program to prepay education costs (see below). The 6 percent tax continues for each year the excess
contribution stays in the 530 account.
The child must be named (designated as beneficiary) in the Coverdell document, but the beneficiary can be
changed to another family member (for example, to a sibling where the first beneficiary gets a scholarship
or drops out). And funds can be rolled over tax-free from one child's account to another's. Funds must be
distributed not later than 30 days after the beneficiary's 30th birthday (or 20 days after the beneficiary's
death if earlier). For special needs beneficiaries, age limits (i.e., no contributions after age 18,
distribution by age 30) don't apply.
Withdrawals are taxable to the person who gets the money, with these major exceptions: Only the earnings
portion is taxable (the contributions come back tax-free). Also, even that part isn't taxable income, as
long as the amount withdrawn doesn't exceed a child's qualified higher education expenses; for that year.
The definition of qualified higher education expenses" includes room and board and books, as well as
tuition. In figuring whether withdrawals exceed qualified expenses, expenses are reduced by certain
scholarships and by amounts for which tax credits (see Educational Credits, below) are allowed. If the
amount withdrawn for the year exceeds the education expenses for the year, the excess is partly taxable
under a complex formula. There's another formula if the sum of withdrawals from this 530 program and from
the qualified tuition (Section 529) program exceed education expenses.
As the person who sets up the Section 530 account, you may change the beneficiary (the child who will get
the funds) or roll the funds over to the account of a new beneficiary, tax-free, if the new beneficiary is a
member of your family. But funds you take back (for example, withdrawal in a year when there are no
qualified higher education expenses, because the child is not enrolled in higher education) are taxable to
you, to the extent of earnings on your contributions, and you will generally have to pay an additional 10
percent tax on the taxable amount. However, you won't owe tax on earnings on amounts contributed that are
returned to you by June 1 of the year following contribution.
Investment policy
In contrast to Section 529 programs and Series EE bonds, you are able to choose and change Section 530
investments as you see fit.
Tip: Check with your financial adviser about using both the Section 530 program, which
has wide investment options but limited ($2,000 or less) contribution/investment amounts, and the Section
529 program, which has limited investment options but allows higher contribution/investment amounts.
Elementary and secondary schools
Section 530 programs can be used to build up funds for primary and secondary education. The tax rules are
similar to those for higher education: withdrawals taxable to the extent of earnings on contributions,
except tax-free up to the child's qualified elementary and secondary education expenses. These expenses
qualify whether the child attends a private, religious or public school. Expenses such as room, board,
tuition, transportation, and uniforms will qualify only where connected with private or religious schools,
but some expenses - books, computers, educational software and internet access - apply as well to children
in public school living at home.
The age limits for higher education apply here too: no contribution after a child reaches age 18,
distribution at age 30 except for special needs beneficiaries. Withdrawals in excess of qualified education
expenses are taxable under a special formula.
Qualified Tuition Programs (Section 529 Programs)
Every state now has a program allowing persons to prepay for future higher education, with tax relief.
Starting in 2018, funds in 529 Plans can also be used for K-12 education.
There are two basic plan types, with many variations among them:
-
The prepaid education arrangement. Here one is essentially buying future education at today's costs, by
buying education credits or certificates. This is the older type of program and tends to limit the
student's choice to schools within the state. Private colleges and universities may now offer this type.
-
Education savings accounts. Here, contributions are made to an account to be used for future higher
education.
In approaching state programs one must distinguish between what the federal tax law allows and what an
individual state's program may impose.
You may open a Section 529 program in any state, but when buying prepaid tuition credits (less popular than
savings accounts), you will want to know which institutions the credits will be applied to.
Unlike certain other tax-favored higher education programs, such as the American Opportunity Tax Credit
(formerly the Hope Credit) and Lifetime Learning tax credits, federal tax law doesn't limit the benefit to
tuition, but can also extend it to room, board, and books (individual state programs could be narrower).
The two key individual parties to the program are the Designated Beneficiary (the student-to-be) and the
Account Owner, who is entitled to choose and change the beneficiary and who is normally the principal
contributor to the program. There are no income limits on who may be an account owner. There's only one
designated beneficiary per account. Thus, a parent with three college-bound children might set up 3
accounts. (Some state programs don't allow the same person to be both beneficiary and account owner.)
Contributions must be in cash, and must not total more than reasonably needed for higher education (as
determined initially by the state). Neither account owner or beneficiary may direct investments, but the
state may allow the owner to select a type of investment fund (e.g., fixed income securities), and to change
the investment annually, and when the beneficiary is changed. The account owner decides who gets the funds
(can pick and change the beneficiary) and is legally allowed to withdraw funds at any time, subject to tax
and penalty discussed later.
Funds in the account not yet distributed at the account owner's death pass as part of the probate estate
under state law though this is not the result for federal estate tax purposes, see below.
Federal Tax Rules
Income tax. Contributions made by the account owner or other contributor are not
deductible for federal income tax purposes. Earnings on contributions grow tax-free while in the program.
Distributions from the fund are tax-free to the extent used for qualified higher education expenses.
Distributions used otherwise are taxable to the extent of the portion which represents earnings.
A Section 529 distribution can be tax-free even though the student is claiming an American Opportunity Tax
Credit (formerly the Hope Credit) or lifetime learning credit, or tax-free treatment for a Section 530
Coverdell distribution if the programs aren't covering the same specific expenses.
Distribution for a purpose other than qualified education is taxed to the one getting the distribution. In
addition, a 10 percent penalty must be imposed on the taxable portion of the distribution, comparable to the
10 percent penalty in Section 530 Coverdell plans.
The account owner may change the beneficiary designation from one to another in the same family. Funds in
the account roll over tax-free for the benefit of the new beneficiary.
Gift Tax. For gift tax purposes, contributions are treated as completed gifts even though
the account owner has the right to withdraw them. Thus, they qualify for the up-to-$15,000 annual gift tax
exclusion in 2019 (same as 2019). One contributing more than $15,000 may elect to treat the gift as made in
equal installments over the year of the gift and the following four years so that up to $60,000 can be given
tax-free in the first year.
A rollover from one beneficiary to another in a younger generation is treated as a gift from the first
beneficiary, an odd result for an act the "giver" may have had nothing to do with.
Estate tax. Funds in the account at the designated beneficiary's death are included in the
beneficiary's estate, another odd result, since those funds may not be available to pay the tax. Funds in
the account at the account owner's death are not included in the owner's estate, except for a portion
thereof where the gift tax exclusion installment election is made for gifts over $15,000. For example, if
the account owner made the election for a gift of $60,000 in 2019, a part of that gift is included in the
estate if he or she dies within five years.
Tip: A Section 529 program can be an especially attractive estate-planning move for
grandparents. There are no income limits, the account owner giving up to $60,000 avoids gift tax, and
estate tax by living five years after the gift, yet has the power to change the beneficiary.
State Tax: For specifics of each state's program, see College Savings Plans Network (CSPN).
Traditional and Roth IRAs
You can use a traditional IRA or Roth IRA as a savings plan to pay qualified higher education expenses.
Withdrawals before age 59 1/2 to pay qualified higher education expenses are not subject to the additional
tax on early withdrawals. To escape the 10 percent tax, however, you must pay education costs that at least
equal your withdrawal amount. The education costs must be "qualified", that is, used for tuition, fees,
books, room and board, supplies, or equipment at a qualified institution of learning and they must be for
yourself, your spouse, or the children or grandchildren or yourself or your spouse. The qualified
institution of learning may be any college, university, vocational school, or any other post-secondary
school that is eligible to participate in federal Department of Education aid programs.
Tip: You do not actually have to use the IRA funds to pay education costs. That is, the
tax relief doesn't require you to trace the IRA withdrawal dollars to a specific education expense
payment. You can pay the costs with your own earnings or savings, with a loan, or with a gift or
inheritance received by the student or the person making the withdrawal. You can use savings accumulated
in a Section 529 (state-sponsored) program.
However, you cannot count education costs paid with proceeds from the following in determining whether your
IRA withdrawal is to be free of the 10 percent tax:
- Tax-free distributions from a Coverdell education savings account (Section 530 program);
- Tax-free scholarships, such as a Pell grant;
- Tax-free employer education assistance program;
-
Any tax-free payment (other than a gift or bequest) that is due to enrollment at the qualified
institution.
Education Savings Bonds
You can exclude from your gross income interest on qualified U.S. savings bonds if you have qualified
higher education expenses during the year in which you redeem the bonds. For tax year 2019, the exclusion
begins phasing out at $81,100 ($79,550 in 2018) modified adjusted gross income ($76,000 indexed for
inflation) and is eliminated for adjusted gross incomes of more than $96,100 ($94,550 in 2018). For married
taxpayers filing jointly, the tax exclusion begins phasing out at $121,600 ($119,300 in 2018) and is
eliminated for adjusted gross incomes of more than $151,600 ($149,300 in 2018). The exclusion is unavailable
to married filing separately.
The education must be of the bondholder, his or her spouse or dependent. Qualified higher education
expenses are tuition and fees, and contributions to Section 529 and 530 programs, reduced for tax-free
scholarships and other relief.
A qualified U.S. savings bond means a Series EE bond issued after 1989. The bond must be either in your
name or in the names of both you and your spouse, and you must be at least 24 years old before the bond's
issue date.
Education Credits
Two tax credits are available for education costs - the American Opportunity Credit (formerly the Hope
Credit) and the Lifetime Learning credit. These credits are available only to taxpayers with adjusted gross
income below specified amounts (see Income Phase-Outs below).
How These Credits Work
The amount of the credit you can claim depends on (1) how much you pay for qualified tuition and other
expenses for students and (2) your adjusted gross income (AGI) for the year.
You must report the eligible student's name and Social Security number on your return to claim the credit.
You subtract the credits from your federal income tax. If the credit reduces your tax below zero, you cannot
receive the excess as a refund. If you receive a refund of education costs for which you claimed a credit in
a later year, you may have to repay ("recapture") the credit.
Caution: If you file married-filing separately, you cannot claim these credits.
Which costs are eligible? Qualifying tuition and related expenses refer to tuition and
fees, and course materials required for enrollment or attendance at an eligible education institution. They
now include books, supplies, and equipment needed for a course of study whether or not the materials must be
purchased from the educational institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance.
"Related" expenses do not include room and board, student activities, athletics (other than courses that
are part of a degree program), insurance, equipment, transportation, or any personal, living, or family
expenses. Student-activity fees are included in qualified education expenses only if the fees must be paid
to the institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance. For expenses paid with borrowed funds, count
the expenses when they are paid, not when borrowings are repaid.
Tip: If you pay qualified expenses for a school semester that begins in the first three
months of the following year, you can use the prepaid amount in figuring your credit.
Example: You pay $1,500 of tuition in December 2019 for the winter semester, which
begins in January . You can use the $1,500 in figuring your 2019 credit. If you paid in January
instead, you would take the credit on your return.
Tip: As future year-end tax planning, this rule gives you a choice of the year to take
the credit for academic periods beginning in the first 3 months of the year; pay by December and take the
credit this year; pay in January or later and take the credit next year.
Eligible students. You, your spouse, or an eligible dependent (someone for whom you can
claim a dependency exemption, including children under age 24 who are full-time students) can be an eligible
student for whom the credit can apply. If you claim the student as a dependent, qualifying expenses paid by
the student are treated as paid by you, and for your credit purposes are added to expenses you paid. A
person claimed as another person's dependent can't claim the credit. The student must be enrolled at an
eligible education institution (any accredited public, non-profit or private post-secondary institution
eligible to participate in student Department of Education aid programs) for at least one academic period
(semester, trimester, etc.) during the year.
No "double-dipping." The tax law says that you can't claim both a credit and a deduction
for the same higher education costs. It also says that if you pay education costs with a tax-free
scholarship, Pell grant, or employer-provided educational assistance, you cannot claim a credit for those
amounts.
Income Limits. To claim the American Opportunity Credit, your modified adjusted gross
income (MAGI) must not exceed $90,000 ($180,000 for joint filers). To claim the Lifetime Learning Credit,
MAGI must not exceed $65,000 ($130,000 for joint filers). "Modified AGI" generally means your adjusted gross
income. The "modifications" only come into play if you have income earned abroad.
The American Opportunity Tax Credit
The American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOC) was made permanent by the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act
of 2015 (PATH). The maximum credit, available only for the first four years of post-secondary education, is
$2,500. You can claim the credit for each eligible student you have for which the credit requirements are
met.
Special Qualification Rules. In addition to being an eligible student, he or she:
- Must be enrolled in a program leading to a degree, certificate, or other recognized credential;
-
Must be taking at least half of a normal full-time load of courses, for at least one semester or
trimester beginning in the year for which the credit is claimed; and
- May not have any drug-related felony convictions.
Amount of credit. The maximum amount of the AOC credit is $2,500. Generally, 40 percent of
the AOC is now a refundable credit for most taxpayers, which means that you can receive up to $1,000 even if
you owe no taxes.
The Lifetime Learning Credit
You may be able to claim a Lifetime Learning credit of up to $2,000 (20 percent of the first $10,000 of
qualified expense) for eligible students (subject to reduction based on your AGI). Only one Lifetime
Learning Credit can be taken per tax return, regardless of the number of students in the family.
-
The credit can help pay for undergraduate, graduate and professional degree courses, including courses
to improve job skills.
-
For courses taken to acquire or improve job skills, there are no requirements as to course loads, so
that even one or two courses can qualify.
- The number of years for which this credit can be claimed is not limited.
Choosing the Credit. You can't claim both credits for the same person in the same year.
But you can claim one credit for one or more family members and the other credit for expenses for one or
more others in the same year - for example, an AOC for your child and a lifetime learning credit for
yourself.
Electing Not To Take the Credit. There are situations in which the credit is not allowed,
or not fully available, if some other education tax benefit is claimed - where the higher education expense
deduction is claimed for the same student, see below, or where credit and tax exemption (under a Section 529
or 530 program) are claimed for the same expense. In that case, the taxpayer - or, more likely, the
taxpayer's tax adviser - will determine which tax rule offers the greater benefit and if it's not the
credit, elect not to take the credit.
Qualified Tuition and Related Expenses Deduction
A limited deduction is allowed for "qualified higher education expenses" -- tuition and related expenses
under the same definition as for tuition credits, above. A $4,000 above the line deduction (Form 8917) is
allowed for qualified tuition expenses in 2015, 2016, and 2017 but was been phased out starting in tax year
2018. For tax years 2015 to 2017, the deduction is allowed on if taxpayer's (modified) adjusted gross income
is $65,000 or less ($130,000 or less on a joint return). If a taxpayer's modified adjusted gross income is
more than $65,000 but not more than $80,000 (more than $130,000 but not more than $160,000 on a joint
return), a deduction is allowed up to $2,000. The tax deduction reduces your amount of income, reducing the
amount of tax you pay. You do not need to itemize deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040) in order to take this
deduction, which benefits higher earners who cannot take the Lifetime Learning Credit because their income
exceeds the limits.
Business expense deduction is allowed, without dollar limit, for education that serves the taxpayer's
business, including employment. a deduction is also allowed for student loan interest, but a taxpayer may
not take more than one deduction for the same item. In addition, you cannot claim this deduction if your
filing status is married filing separately or if another person can claim an exemption for you as a
dependent on his or her tax return.
"Qualified higher education expenses" must be reduced by any such expense paid with an amount treated as
tax-free under the rules for excluding income from Series EE bonds, or Section 529 or 530 programs.
Employer-Provided Education Assistance
If your employer paid education assistance benefits (e.g., reimbursements of tuition), part or all of them
may be tax-free. You can exclude up to $5,250 per year of the benefits you receive under a qualified
educational assistance program. But you can't both exclude and deduct the same item, even if it's otherwise
deductible. In order to qualify, your employer must have established an educational assistance plan that
does not discriminate in favor of highly paid employees or owners. The exclusion applies to undergraduate
level courses other than those involving sports, game, and hobbies. The courses do not need to relate to
your job. The exclusion is available for tuition, fees, books, and supplies but not meals, lodging or
transportation. And it applies to benefits for graduate-level courses.
In addition to the exclusion for qualifying education plans, your employer can provide reimbursement for
business related courses, including graduate courses. Prior to tax year 2018, if your employer did not
reimburse you for these expenses, you were entitled to deduct them as a miscellaneous itemized deduction on
Schedule A, Itemized Deductions, subject to the two percent deduction floor. To qualify, the
expense must meet the requirement of your employer or the law or maintain or improve skills in your current
job. The course must not meet minimum education requirements for your job or qualify you for a new trade or
business.
However, under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 ("tax reform"), for tax years 2018 through 2025, employee
business-related deductions (including education expenses) are disallowed. That is, there are no
miscellaneous deductions on Schedule A as there were previously. Self-employed individuals are still able to
deduct qualifying educational expenses on Schedule C.
Student Loans
You may be able to deduct interest on student loans. You may also be able to exclude income that you would
otherwise have to report if a student loan is canceled.
Interest Deduction. You may deduct student loan interest you pay, including interest paid
that's not currently due because payment is deferred.
Deduction is allowed even though it would otherwise be nondeductible personal interest. But you may deduct
only if you are the one legally bound to pay the interest, and only on loans solely for qualified expenses
(so not under open credit lines).
The student-loan deduction (up to $2,500 starting in 2013), was made permanent by AFTRA, but only to
taxpayers whose AGI is below $160,000 (joint filers) or $80,000 (single filers). Married couples filing
separately can't take the deduction.
The student-loan interest deduction is an "above the line" deduction. In other words, you don't have to
itemize in order to claim it. The loan must have been taken out to cover education expenses of at least
half-time study for yourself, your spouse, or a person who was your dependent when you took out the
loan.
Caution: You cannot deduct interest on a loan from a related person, for example, a
relative, or a business entity in which you have an ownership interest as defined by the tax law. And you
can't deduct if you are claimed as a dependent.
Tip: Where interest fails to qualify under these tests, consider a home equity loan,
interest on which is generally deductible.
Cancellation of Student Loan. If certain requirements are met, cancellations of student
loans that are intended to induce students to perform certain services do not increase the student's gross
income. This relief extends to certain private programs, as well as government and public programs.
What Types of Tax Relief are Available for Costs of my Children's Higher Education?
A wide variety of tax relief is available, but you'll need to choose which credit or deduction to claim
or which savings plan to use based on your individual tax situation. You also can't use two different
kinds of relief for the same item. For instance, you can't take the higher education credit and tuition
fees deduction for the same student for the same year. You also can't take the American Opportunity Credit
and the Lifetime Learning Credit for the same student for the same year. There may also be limits based on
adjusted gross income.
What is the Education Tax Credit?
Two tax credits are available for education costs - the American Opportunity Credit (formerly the Hope
Credit) and the Lifetime Learning Credit. These credits are available only to taxpayers with adjusted
gross income below specified amounts, see Income Phase-Outs, below. Both credits were made permanent by
the Protecting Americans from Tax hikes Act of 2015 (PATH).
How Do These Credits Work?
The amount of the credit you can claim is either, $0, $2,000, or $4,000 and depends on (1) how much you
pay for qualified tuition and other expenses for students and (2) your adjusted gross income (AGI) for the
year.
You must report on Form 8863 the eligible student's name and Social Security number on your return to
claim the credit. You subtract the credits from your federal income tax. If the credit reduces your tax
below zero, you cannot receive the excess as a refund. If you receive a refund of education costs for
which you claimed a credit in a later year, you may have to repay ("recapture") the credit.
Caution: If you file married-filing separately, you cannot claim these credits.
Which costs are eligible? Qualifying tuition and related expenses refer to tuition and
fees, and course materials required for enrollment or attendance at an eligible education institution.
They now include books, supplies, and equipment needed for a course of study whether or not the materials
must be purchased from the educational institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance.
"Related" expenses do not include room and board, student activities, athletics (other than courses that
are part of a degree program), insurance, equipment, transportation, or any personal, living, or family
expenses. Student-activity fees are included in qualified education expenses only if the fees must be paid
to the institution as a condition of enrollment or attendance. For expenses paid with borrowed funds,
count the expenses when they are paid, not when borrowings are repaid.
Tip: If you pay qualified expenses for a school semester that begins in the first
three months of the following year, you can use the prepaid amount in figuring your credit.
Example: You pay $1,500 of tuition in December NaN for the winter
NaN- semester,
which begins in January . You can use the $1,500 in figuring your NaN credit. If you paid in
January instead, you would take the credit on your return.
Tip: As future year-end tax planning, this rule gives you a choice of the year to take
the credit for academic periods beginning in the first 3 months of the year; pay by December and take
the credit this year; pay in January or later and take the credit next year.
Eligible students. You, your spouse, or an eligible dependent (someone for whom you can
claim a dependency exemption, including children under age 24 who are full-time students) can be an
eligible student for whom the credit can apply. If you claim the student as a dependent, qualifying
expenses paid by the student are treated as paid by you, and for your credit purposes are added to
expenses you paid. A person claimed as another person's dependent can't claim the credit. The student must
be enrolled at an eligible education institution (any accredited public, non-profit or private
post-secondary institution eligible to participate in student Department of Education aid programs) for at
least one academic period (semester, trimester, etc.) during the year.
No "double-dipping." The tax law says that you can't claim both a credit and a deduction
for the same higher education costs. It also says that if you pay education costs with a tax-free
scholarship, Pell grant, or employer-provided educational assistance, you cannot claim a credit for those
amounts.
Income limits. To claim the American Opportunity Credit, for example, your modified
adjusted gross income (MAGI) must not exceed $90,000 ($180,000 for joint filers). To claim the Lifetime
Learning Credit, MAGI must not exceed $66,000 ($132,000 for joint filers). "Modified AGI" generally means
your adjusted gross income. The "modifications" only come into play if you have income earned abroad.
The American Opportunity Tax Credit
The American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOC) was made permanent starting with tax-year 2015. The maximum
credit, available only for the first four years of post-secondary education, is $2,500. You can claim the
credit for each eligible student you have for which the credit requirements are met.
Special qualification rules. In addition to being an eligible student, he or she:
- Must be enrolled in a program leading to a degree, certificate, or other recognized credential;
-
Must be taking at least half of a normal full-time load of courses, for at least one semester or
trimester beginning in the year for which the credit is claimed; and
- May not have any drug-related felony convictions.
Amount of credit. The maximum amount of the AOC is $2,500. Generally, 40 percent of the
AOC is now a refundable credit for most taxpayers, which means that you can receive up to $1,000 even if
you owe no taxes.
The Lifetime Learning Credit
You may be able to claim a Lifetime Learning Credit of up to $2,000 (20 percent of the first $10,000 of
qualified expense) for eligible students (subject to reduction based on your AGI). Only one Lifetime
Learning Credit can be taken per tax return, regardless of the number of students in the family.
-
The credit can help pay for undergraduate, graduate and professional degree courses, including courses
to improve job skills.
-
For courses taken to acquire or improve job skills, there are no requirements as to course loads, so
that even one or two courses can qualify.
- The number of years for which this credit can be claimed is not limited.
Choosing the Credit. You can't claim both credits for the same person in the same year.
But you can claim one credit for one or more family members and the other credit for expenses for one or
more others in the same year - for example, an AOC for your child and a lifetime learning credit for
yourself.
Electing Not to Take the Credit. There are situations in which the credit is not
allowed, or not fully available, if some other education tax benefit is claimed - where the higher
education expense deduction is claimed for the same student, see below, or where credit and tax exemption
(under a Section 529 or 530 program) are claimed for the same expense. In that case, the taxpayer - or,
more likely, the taxpayer's tax adviser - will determine which tax rule offers the greater benefit and if
it's not the credit, elect not to take the credit.
Do any tax planning considerations apply to the education tax credit?
For an academic period (quarter, semester, etc.) beginning in the first 3 months of a calendar year, you
can pick which year to pay the expense and take the credit. That is, pay in December 2019 and take the
credit in 2019 or pay in, say, February and take the credit in .
Your family may be able to save tax by foregoing the education credit and taking an available exemption
for program distributions instead.
Do living expenses while in school qualify for tax relief?
Sometimes. Examples are for relief provided for Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (Section 530
programs), for Qualified Tuition Programs (Section 529), for withdrawals from traditional and Roth IRAs,
and for student loans.
How does a Coverdell (Section 530) Education Savings Account work?
An education IRA differs from other IRAs in the following ways:
A 530 account may be used for primary and secondary education, including paying for room and board of
children in private schools, and for computers and related materials whether or not away from home.
How can my family make best use of a Coverdell (Section 530) program?
There can be a number of Section 530 accounts for any student. Various family members, such as
grandparents, aunts, and uncles, and siblings--and persons outside the family--can contribute to separate
accounts for a student.
The original student beneficiary for the Section 530 account can be changed to another family member,
such as a sibling--for example where the original beneficiary wins a scholarship or drops out.
Funds can be rolled over tax-free from one family member's Section 530 account to another's for example,
to avoid distribution when the first family member reaches age 30.
The education tax credit (where applicable) can be waived in favor of tax-free treatment for Section 530
account distributions.
What are Qualified Tuition Programs (QTPs)?
Also called Section 529 plans, these college savings plans have been established by almost every state
and some private colleges. You invest now to cover future college or vocational school expenses, by
contributing to a savings account or buying tuition credits redeemable in the future. Investments grow
tax-free, and distributions to pay college expenses can also be tax-free. You may choose any state's plan,
regardless of where you live. Starting in 2018, funds from 529 plans can be used for up to $10,000 of
qualified expenses related to K-12 education as well.
Tip: Even if a QTP is used to finance a student's education, the student or the
student's parents still may be eligible to claim the American Opportunity Credit or the Lifetime
Learning Credit.
How do Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (Section 530) and Qualified Tuition Plans (Section 529)
differ?
Section 530 plans limit investment to $2,000 a year per student; 529 plans allow a much larger
investment. Section 530 plans allow a wide choice of investments; 529 investment choices are limited and
conservative. Section 530 is a single nationwide program, whereas each 529 program is different. Both are
available for higher education as well as primary and secondary education.
Can my traditional IRA be used for education?
Yes. The 10 percent penalty on withdrawal under age 59-1/2 won't apply, but ordinary income tax will
apply to at least some of the withdrawal.
Can a Roth IRA be used for education?
Yes, generally under the same terms as traditional IRAs. Also, ordinary income tax is somewhat less
likely or may be smaller in amount, than with traditional IRAs.
What tax deductions are available for college education?
You can choose to take a tax deduction rather than the college tuition tax credits noted above. A tax
deduction is usually taken if income is too high for the tax credits. The tax deduction reduces your
amount of income. The tax credits reduce the amount of tax you pay.
A $4,000 above the line deduction for qualified tuition expenses was extended through tax-year 2017 by
the Bipartisan Budget Act but unless extended by Congress, starting in 2018, the deduction is no longer
available.
Note: For tax years 2015, 2016, and 2017 a deduction up to $4,000 is allowed on if
taxpayer's (modified) adjusted gross income is $65,000 or less ($130,000 or less on a joint return). If
taxpayer's modified adjusted gross income is more than $65,000 but not more than $80,000 (more than
$130,000 but not more than $160,000 on a joint return), a deduction is allowed up to $2,000.
A business expense deduction is also allowed without dollar limit, for education that serves the
taxpayer's business, including employment. The deduction is also allowed for student loan interest;
however, a taxpayer may not take more than one deduction for the same item.
What tax benefits are available for continuing/adult education for a sideline hobby?
If it's not part of a degree or certificate program, and not work-related, the limited deduction (up to
$4,000 for qualified tuition and fees) may be your only option; however, please note that this deduction
expired at the end of 2017. Again, unless reauthorized by Congress for tax years 2018 and beyond, the
deduction is not available after tax year 2017. The deduction amount depends on your income. Some sideline
interests might qualify for exclusion if paid for under an employer-provided education assistance
program.
Can I deduct student loan interest?
Since personal interest is generally non-deductible, deductions must meet several tests:
-
You must be the person liable on the debt and the loan must be for education only (not an open line of
credit).
-
Your income can't exceed $160,000 on a joint return or $80,000 for single filers. Married couples
filing separately cannot take the deduction.
- You can't deduct if you're claimed as a dependent.
- Deduction ceiling is $2,500 (starting in tax year 2013).
If I take a home equity loan to pay education expenses, can I deduct the interest?
For tax years prior to 2018, you could deduct interest form a home equity loan used to pay educational
and other non-home improvement-related expenses, not as student loan interest. In this case, there was no
income ceiling on your deduction, and certain other student loan limits didn't apply. However, for tax
years 2018 through 2025, taxpayers are no longer able to deduct interest on home equity loans taken out
for non-home-related purposes.
What tax treatment applies if my student loan debt is canceled?
Usually you're taxed on the unpaid loan balance, but the tax can be waived if the debt is canceled if you
worked:
- For a certain period of time,
- In certain professions, and
- For any broad class of employers.
Tax reform legislation passed in 2017 further stipulated that student loan debt forgiveness due to death
or permanent and total disability is excluded from income.
What's the tax relief for education savings bonds?
Interest on redemption of Series EE bonds is tax-exempt if you redeem them in a year you have qualified
education expenses. Exemption depends on the amount of your income in the year you redeem the bond.
Must I pay tax on my employer's payment or reimbursement of my education expenses?
Maybe not. Starting in 2013, up to $5,250 can be tax-free. Exemption can apply to graduate level
courses.
Can I take tax deductions for education I pay for that helps me in my work?
For tax years prior to 2018, the answer was, yes, if it's to maintain or improve skills in your present
job, but no, if it was to meet minimum requirements of that job, or to qualify to enter a new business.
Furthermore, employee's deductions were subject to the two percent floor on miscellaneous itemized
deductions. However, under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 ("tax reform"), for tax years 2018 through
2025, employee business-related deductions (including education expenses) are disallowed. That is, there
are no miscellaneous deductions on Schedule A as there were previously. Self-employed individuals are
still able to deduct qualifying educational expenses on Schedule C.