Hello -
My daughter conducted a Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) at the Mayo Clinic last summer. Mayo sent her a 1099Misc reporting $6000 in box3. I am somewhat confused on how to report this on her taxes. Technically I can still chose to claim her as a dependent as she was a Junior/Senior in 2024 and was 22 in 2204 (and I meet all the other requirements for a dependent).
If I report the 1099Misc in the wages section, TT wants to setup a Schedule C and assume she is a small business but this is not the case. I then get into "unearned income" that then is also being taxed at my rate (Kiddy Tax) and not her rate.
I've also seen other comments where I should instead be reporting this in the "Educational Summary -> Scholarships/Grants (for all schools)" as "Other Scholarship/Grants/Fellowships" and as long as the total scholarships she has reported on her 1098T (box 5) and this Mayo 1099Misc is less than the amount reported in Box1 of her 1098T, then the fellowship is not taxable?
Is the latter the correct way to report this for her? If so, how do I tell the IRS that the 1099Misc is reported in the Educational Summary Section??
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Yes, report the fellowship/stipend in the "Educational Expenses and Scholarships (1098-T) Scholarships/Grants (for all schools)" as "Other Scholarship/Grants/Fellowships".
Q. and as long as the total scholarships she has reported on her 1098T (box 5) and this Mayo 1099Misc is less than the amount reported in Box1 of her 1098T, then the fellowship is not taxable?
A. No. You cannot apply/allocate the Mayo fellowship to tuition. It must be reported as taxable income.*
If you have a 1098-T, one of the follow-up questions will be do you have any scholarships not shown on the 1098-T. Enter the fellowship/stipend there. You will have to go thru the whole education interview to get to the scholarship screen. At the scholarship screen, enter the amount of the fellowship. When asked if any was used for room and board, answer yes. Then enter the amount you want to be taxable (usually all of it), in the pop up box. R&B are not "qualified educational expenses". So, this is how you tell TT that it is taxable. Note the wording at that screen “or other expenses”. You didn’t have to literally use the scholarship for R&B. This will put it on line 8r of Schedule 1.
Q. How do I tell the IRS that the 1099Misc is reported in the Educational Summary Section?
A. Basically, you don't. ** Their computers will most likely match the amount on Schedule 1 to the 1099-Misc and there won't be a problem. If you hear from the IRS, it's easily explained.
*Scholarships are a hybrid between earned and unearned income. It is earned income for purposes of the $14,600 filing requirement (2024) and the dependent standard deduction calculation (earned income + $450). It is not earned income for the kiddie tax and other purposes (e.g. EIC). For grad students and post grad fellows, scholarship, stipend and fellowship income is earned income ("compensation") for IRA contributions.
**There is a way to cover that concern. After entering as scholarship, you re-enter it as other income at the 1099-Misc screen. Then you enter it a third time , except as a negative number. That will put two offsetting entries on line 8z of Schedule 1.
The fellowship payment is not subject to self employment tax so don’t complete a Schedule C. Report on her return as Other Income. The income is subject to Kiddie Tax.
Yes, report the fellowship/stipend in the "Educational Expenses and Scholarships (1098-T) Scholarships/Grants (for all schools)" as "Other Scholarship/Grants/Fellowships".
Q. and as long as the total scholarships she has reported on her 1098T (box 5) and this Mayo 1099Misc is less than the amount reported in Box1 of her 1098T, then the fellowship is not taxable?
A. No. You cannot apply/allocate the Mayo fellowship to tuition. It must be reported as taxable income.*
If you have a 1098-T, one of the follow-up questions will be do you have any scholarships not shown on the 1098-T. Enter the fellowship/stipend there. You will have to go thru the whole education interview to get to the scholarship screen. At the scholarship screen, enter the amount of the fellowship. When asked if any was used for room and board, answer yes. Then enter the amount you want to be taxable (usually all of it), in the pop up box. R&B are not "qualified educational expenses". So, this is how you tell TT that it is taxable. Note the wording at that screen “or other expenses”. You didn’t have to literally use the scholarship for R&B. This will put it on line 8r of Schedule 1.
Q. How do I tell the IRS that the 1099Misc is reported in the Educational Summary Section?
A. Basically, you don't. ** Their computers will most likely match the amount on Schedule 1 to the 1099-Misc and there won't be a problem. If you hear from the IRS, it's easily explained.
*Scholarships are a hybrid between earned and unearned income. It is earned income for purposes of the $14,600 filing requirement (2024) and the dependent standard deduction calculation (earned income + $450). It is not earned income for the kiddie tax and other purposes (e.g. EIC). For grad students and post grad fellows, scholarship, stipend and fellowship income is earned income ("compensation") for IRA contributions.
**There is a way to cover that concern. After entering as scholarship, you re-enter it as other income at the 1099-Misc screen. Then you enter it a third time , except as a negative number. That will put two offsetting entries on line 8z of Schedule 1.
Thank you for the reply. You have helped me greatly understand how to report this and how to get the $6000 fellowship to report correctly.
One huge "gap" TT has is that she still has to do the 8615 Kiddie Tax form (she won a $1750 college prize and has a second 1099Misc that truly needs to gets entered as a 1099Misc - Schedule1 Line 8i). When doing the final TT review, it flags form 8615 as needing the Parents income and tax from our return, which I then have to enter to correct the review. However, when I expand the 8615 form itself, TT never asks me if I have ScheduleD Dividend and Short/Long Term entries. I do, and this make a huge difference on what she owes on that $1750 1099Misc.
The kiddie tax is really a separate subject. You may want to post a new question to get experts on that subject to look at it. I'm not very knowledgeable on it.
That said, a cursory review of form 8615 shows no place to enter the parents capital gains/qualified dividends; only a box to check if the Qualified Dividends and Capital Gain Tax Worksheet was used.
If the student has capital gains and or qualified dividends, that will come up in the income interview.
Thanks again for all your assistance on this question. I also after looking more in the "income and wages" section, under "less common income", there is a section for "child income". Those interview questions ask me for the dividends and cap gains needed for the 8615. I had missed this section the first time and the error check only flags the income and tax amounts, and not the figures needed for calculating the the alternative taxable parent income using schedule D figures.
When I was doing the review and needed to enter the values TT flagged, I looked at the overall 8615 TT shows and it shows a richer form that the IRS shows (the richer fields is in the IRS instructions). I then went back to the step by step and was able to enter all the values needed to bring the kiddy tax down significantly. If I had just entered the 2 amounts and not switched to the forms view, I would have missed it.
Appreciate you noting that your not an expert in the 8615 form, but your help with the 1099Misc fellowship has greatly helped as I initially had it entered not on line 8r (it was down on 8z) and as a result it ended up with over $1000 additional taxes when mis-categorized. You first explanations on how to enter it on the educational summary and get it over on Schedule 1, line 8r was the difference maker for us.
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