- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
When asked if I completed 4 years of school prior to 1/1/16, is this referring to a completed 4 year degree?
Topics:
posted
June 5, 2019
11:01 PM
last updated
June 05, 2019
11:01 PM
1 Best answer
Accepted Solutions
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
When asked if I completed 4 years of school prior to 1/1/16, is this referring to a completed 4 year degree?
Yes, the question is referring to a completed 4 year degree.
If you are working toward a four-year degree, you will meet the part of the definition of an eligible student defined as “has not completed the first four years of post-secondary education as of the beginning of the taxable year”. The fact that you may have taken more than 4 years working toward the degree is not what is being measured. The fact that you have not completed it yet is what is being measured.
If you are working toward a four-year degree, you will meet the part of the definition of an eligible student defined as “has not completed the first four years of post-secondary education as of the beginning of the taxable year”. The fact that you may have taken more than 4 years working toward the degree is not what is being measured. The fact that you have not completed it yet is what is being measured.
June 5, 2019
11:01 PM
1 Reply
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
When asked if I completed 4 years of school prior to 1/1/16, is this referring to a completed 4 year degree?
Yes, the question is referring to a completed 4 year degree.
If you are working toward a four-year degree, you will meet the part of the definition of an eligible student defined as “has not completed the first four years of post-secondary education as of the beginning of the taxable year”. The fact that you may have taken more than 4 years working toward the degree is not what is being measured. The fact that you have not completed it yet is what is being measured.
If you are working toward a four-year degree, you will meet the part of the definition of an eligible student defined as “has not completed the first four years of post-secondary education as of the beginning of the taxable year”. The fact that you may have taken more than 4 years working toward the degree is not what is being measured. The fact that you have not completed it yet is what is being measured.
June 5, 2019
11:01 PM
Still have questions?
Make a post