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loans have nothing to do with the tax credits available
Obtain the 1098T form and input that into your tax return.
Yes, qualifying educational expenses paid with student loans funds count as being paid out-of-pocket. You can claim an education credit based on these expenses if you qualify otherwise. Please view this TurboTax FAQ to see the qualifications for claiming an education credit. You do not pay interest on the student loan until you start repaying the balance. You can claim educational expenses without Form 1098-T. The IRS does not explicitly require this form in order to claim an education credit. Please follow the directions below to enter your education expenses into TurboTax:
Yes, as long as your son is listed as a dependent on your tax return. There is no where in TurboTax (TT), or the IRS forms, that you list the source of the money that pays for you college expenses; you enter what you (or your son or anybody else) paid, not what the source was.
I disagree with the statement "The IRS does not explicitly require this form [1098-T] in order to claim an education credit." You must have the form or an exception (the TT interview asks the exception question) to claim the credit. Check with your school to be sure they are an "eligible institution". Schools frequently (although erroneously) don't issue a 1098-T when the tuition is paid directly to the school, by loans. That qualifies as an excpetion.
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