in Education
I am a student and beneficiary of a 529. I was given a 1099Q to file and I am fairly confident that given my understanding of qualified education expenses that the gross distribution exceeds the qualified amount. I want to file properly and pay the penalty but I am confused where I am supposed to enter other education expenses. On the 1098-T there is the scholarship I received, the tuition I paid, and I see pages asking about room, board, and textbooks directly required by the school and notes from turbotax saying "Don't include expenses you didn't pay directly to your school here. We’ll add those separately." But I cannot find where to add those expenses. It seems to me that turbotax is counting the entire 1099Q as qualified and not prompting anywhere to fix this.
Thank you for your understanding and patience
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You can't enter those room and board expenses yet. This is a known glitch in TurboTax (TT). They are working on it. The 2025 education and 529 sections appear totally redesigned, from last year.
Post from an Employee Tax Expert, Tuesday Feb 10, at another thread, on this same topic: "This is currently being investigated and we are informed that the issue should be fixed during the upcoming update this Friday, February 13. Please check back after February 13 to confirm whether or not you are still having issues with this."
At the screen "Did (student's name) have any of these common situations in 2025", check the box "had education expenses other than tuition". That will get you a screen, later, "Time to enter (student's name) educational expenses". Enter those other expenses at "Optional books and materials from the school".
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
Here's a post on the five main points on the 1098-T:
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Qualified Tuition Plans (QTP 529 Plans) Distributions
General Discussion
It’s complicated.
For 529 plans, there is an “owner” (usually the parent), and a “beneficiary” (usually the student dependent). The "recipient" of the distribution can be either the owner or the beneficiary depending on who the money was sent to. When the money goes directly from the Qualified Tuition Plan (QTP) to the school, the student is the "recipient". The distribution will be reported on IRS form 1099-Q.
The 1099-Q gets reported on the recipient's return.** The recipient's name & SS# will be on the 1099-Q.
Even though the 1099-Q is going on the student's return, the 1098-T should go on the parent's return, so you can claim the education credit. You can do this because he is your dependent.
You can and should claim the tuition credit before claiming the 529 plan earnings exclusion. The American Opportunity Credit (AOC or AOTC) is 100% of the first $2000 of tuition and 25% of the next $2000 ($2500 maximum credit). The educational expenses he claims for the 1099-Q should be reduced by the amount of educational expenses you claim for the credit. Room and board (R&B) are also qualified expenses for the 529 distribution, but not the AOC (R&B are also not qualified expenses for a scholarship to be tax free).
But be aware, you can not double dip. You cannot count the same tuition money, for the tuition credit, that gets him an exclusion from the taxability of the earnings (interest) on the 529 plan. Since the credit is more generous; use as much of the tuition as is needed for the credit and the rest for the interest exclusion. Another special rule allows you to claim the tuition credit regardless of whose money was used to pay the tuition.
In addition, there is another rule that says the 10% penalty is waived if he was unable to cover the 529 plan withdrawal with educational expenses either because he got scholarships or the expenses were used (by him or the parents) to claim the credits. He'll have to pay tax on the earnings, at his lower tax rate (subject to the “kiddie tax”), but not the penalty.
Total qualified expenses (including room & board) less amounts paid by scholarship less amounts used to claim the Tuition credit equals the amount you can use to claim the earnings exclusion on the 1099-Q.
Example:
$10,000 in educational expenses (including room & board)
-$3000 paid by tax free scholarship***
-$4000 used to claim the American Opportunity credit
=$3000 Can be used against the 1099-Q (on the recipient’s return)
Box 1 of the 1099-Q is $5000
Box 2 is $2800
3000/5000=60% of the earnings are tax free; 40% are taxable
40% x 2800= $1120
There is $1120 of taxable income (on the recipient’s return)
**Alternatively; you can just not report the 1099-Q, at all, if your student-beneficiary has sufficient educational expenses, including room & board (even if he lives at home) to cover the distribution. You would still have to do the math to see if there were enough expenses left over for you to claim the tuition credit. Again, you cannot double dip! When the box 1 amount on form 1099-Q is fully covered by expenses, TurboTax will enter nothing about the 1099-Q on the actual tax forms. But, it will prepare a 1099-Q worksheet for your records, in case of an IRS inquiry.
On form 1099-Q, instructions to the recipient reads: "Nontaxable distributions from CESAs and QTPs are not required to be reported on your income tax return. You must determine the taxability of any distribution."
***Another alternative is have the student report some of his scholarship as taxable income, to free up some expenses for the 1099-Q and/or tuition credit. Most people come out better having the scholarship taxable before the 529 earnings. A student, with no other income, can have up to $14,600 of taxable scholarship (in 2024) and still pay no income tax.
At the screen "Did (student's name) have any of these common situations in 2025", I checked the box "had education expenses other than tuition". I am now on the screen for "Time to enter educational expenses" but on this page it says "Don't include expenses you didn't pay directly to your school here. We’ll add those separately." I am unable to find the flow for expenses not paid directly to the school. It also appears that even without entering any expenses, TurboTax thinks that the entire 1099q form is already for qualified expenses when it is not.
This experience was resolved in TurboTax Online recently and is being rolled out to TurboTax desktop products over the coming days. You should now have access to this in the online product, and I'd give until the end of the week for all desktop users to have this update.
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