in Education
Even the Live Tax Advice was not able to explain this to me.
My daughter is my dependent and I claim her as such on my taxes.
She filed her own taxes because she works.
She got a 1099-Q with her as the Recipient and filed that and the College 1098-T.
On HER 1099-Q she has
Box 1 - 33689
Box 2 Earnings 11551
Box 3 Basis 22128
Her 1098-T shows
Box 1 Tuition 58525
Box 5 Scholarship 37000
She is NOT claiming education credit - and she ended up having to pay small amount of Kiddie Tax because she took out a bit more than the qualified expense (58425-37000 = $21425) so tax based on $12255 excess. So far so good...
Now to MY return
I also took money out of the 529 Plan...
My 1099-Q listing for me shows
Box 1 39098
Box 2 Earnings 13186
Box 3 Basis 25912
I spend some of that Money paying for qualified Expenses for my daugher.
$3110 Went to pay another college sommer class we have a 1098-T from
$18910 was spent paying Room and Board to the First college that my daughter submitted for
and $907 on a new Computer.
So the Total of Qualified expenses are $22927.
So I end up with 39098-22927 = 16161 in Excess distributions. And TT calculates my taxable part to be $5454.
I am fine with that. I am NOT claiming any educational credits - I earn to much.
But here is the problem. For me TT wants to add a 10 percent penalty on the $5454.
But because my daughter received $37000 in Scholarships - There is supposed to be an exception to the rule... Anyone is allowed to take out up to the scholarship amount without penalty.
I have no idea how to get TT to understand that she got that scholarship.
If I enter the 1098-T as is from her college - the numbers gets messed up.
Right now I faked the 1098-T for her college.
I told Turbotax the Actual Tuition paid was $37000 and in box 5 $37000 - that results in the Tuition expense being a total of 0 on the worksheets - but it honors the scholarship during the 10 percent penalty calculation.
I am afraid running into problems because now the 1098-T does not match what was sent to us - but is it wrong???
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Q. How do I enter this.
A. Very carefully. You have to enter the expenses at the 1098-T section, making adjustments in your entries for expenses and scholarships allocated on her return. You need to show the scholarship amount matching the non qualified portion of your distribution.
As I explained at your other post*, it's best to use a workaround in TurboTax:
Enter the 1099-Q. When asked who the student is answer: someone else not listed here (lying to TurboTax to get it to do what you want does not constitute lying to the IRS). Enter the student's name when asked. A few screens later, you'll get one simple screen to enter expenses. Press Done at the 1099-Q summary screen, to get there. Also enter the amount of the scholarship in the box "Tax-free assistance"**. This reports the earnings as taxable and claims the scholarship exception. You do not have to deal with the complicated adjustments needed in the “Educational expenses and Scholarships” (1098-T) section later. TT will prepare form 5329 to claim the penalty exception.
** In addition to the expenses, you paid with your distribution, also enter the expenses that were paid by the scholarship. This will show that scholarship paid the same amount of expenses (as the non qualified portion of the distribution) qualifying you for the penalty exception.
I revised my answer above, to add "In addition to the expenses, you paid with your distribution, also enter the expenses that were paid by the scholarship. This will show that scholarship paid the same amount of expenses (as the non qualified portion of the distribution) qualifying you for the penalty exception. "
If her income from working was less than $14,600, she can declare some of her scholarship as taxable to reduce the amount of the 529 distribution that is taxable and subject to the kiddie tax.
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