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I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

 
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11 Replies
mtow1998
New Member

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

my daughter lives with us. I pay over half of her expenses, have claimed her in the past. however she made over 4050.00 in income can I claim her this year 2018. we pay for education.
Carl
Level 15

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

If you'll take a look at the dependency requirements, if your daughter meets all four of those requirements, then you qualify to claim her. Take special note of what is *not* in those requirements. Namely, there is no mention of an income requirement at all. The student could literally earn a million dollars and still qualify as your dependent. The students earnings just flat out do not matter, no way, no how.
" I pay over half of her expenses"
Take note also that there is absolutely no requirement for you the parent to provide *any* support. Not one single penny. The support requirement is on the student, and *only* the student.

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

Carl, I bought a laptop for my son to use in college and used 529 funds, he is 28 and lives on his own. Can I show the laptop expenses on my taxes since they were from the 529 if he is not my dependent ?
If not, why not ?
Carl
Level 15

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

If you are/were the beneficiary recipient whose SSN appears on the 1099-Q and you are not claiming your son as your dependent, then no.
However, if he is the named beneficiary recipient on the 1099_Q then he can claim the laptop in the category of "lab expenses", and that claim is not limited to 1099-Q funds either.
Carl
Level 15

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

If you are not claiming her as a dependent, you the parent can't claim any of the education stuff. Only the daughter can. But understand this because it's important.

If you *QUALIFY* to claim your daughter as a dependent, it DOES NOT MATTER if you claim her or not, the student MUST select the option for "I can be claimed on someone else's return" when the student starts the student's tax return. It doesn't matter that you don't claim her on your tax return.

Note also that a LOT of the education credits will be lost too since you are not claiming her and reporting the education stuff on your (the parent's) return.

              • College Education Expenses

 

Colleges work in academic years, while the IRS works in calendar years. So the reality is, it takes you 5 calendar years to get that 4 year degree. With that said:

 

 - Scholarships and grants are claimed/reported as taxable income (initially) in the year they are received. It does not matter what year that scholarship or grant is *for*

 

- Tuition and other qualified education expenses are reported/claimed in the tax year they are paid. It does not matter what year they pay *for*.

 

Understand that figuring out who claims the student as a dependent, and determining who claims the education expenses & credits, is two different determinations. It depends on the specific situation as outlined below. After you read it, I have also attached a chart at the bottom. You can click on the chart to enlarge it so you can read it. If it’s still to hard to read on your screen then right-click on the enlarged image and elect to save it to your computer. Then you can double-click the saved image file on your computer to open it, and it will be even easier to read.

 

Here’s the general rules gisted from IRS Publication 970 at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p970.pdf Some words are in bold, italicized, or capitalized just for emphasis. This is because correct interpretation by the reader is everything. Take the below contents LITERALLY, and do not try to “read between the lines”. If you do, you’ll interpret it incorrectly and risk reporting things wrong on your taxes. For example, there is a vast difference between “can be claimed” and “must be claimed”.  The first one indicates a choice. The second one provides no choice.

 

If the student:

 

Is under the age of 24 on Dec 31 of the tax year and:

 

Is enrolled in an undergraduate program at an accredited institution and:

 

Is enrolled as at least a half time student for one academic semester that begins during the tax year, (each institution has their own definition of a half time student) and:

 

the STUDENT did NOT provide more that 50% of the STUDENT’S support (schollarships/grants received by the student ***do not count*** as the student providing their own support)

 

Then:

 

The parents will claim the student as a dependent on the parent's tax return and:

 

The parents will claim all schollarships, grants, tuition payments, and the student's 1098-T on the parent's tax return and:

 

The parents will claim all educational tax credits that qualify.

 

If the student will be filing a tax return and:

 

The parents qualify to claim the student as a dependent, then:

 

The student must select the option for "I can be claimed on someone else's return", on the student's tax return. The student must select this option ieven f the parent's qualify to claim the student as a dependent, and the parents do not claim them.

 

Now here’s some additional information that may or may not affect who files the 1098-T. If the amount of scholarships/grants exceeds the amount of qualified education expenses, the parent will know this when reporting the education on their tax return, because the parent will not qualify for any of the tax credits. (They only qualify for tax credits based on out-of-pocket qualified expenses not covered by scholarships/grants.)  Also, the parent’s will not qualify for the credits depending on their MAGI which is different for each credit, and depends on the marital status of the parent or parents.

 

In the case where scholarships/grants covers “all” qualified education expenses, the parent’s don’t need to report educational information on their dependent student at all – but they still claim the student as a dependent if they “qualify” to claim the student.

 

 If the scholarships/grants exceed the qualified education expenses, then the student will report the 1098-T and all other educational expenses and scholarships/grants on the student’s tax return. The student will pay taxes on the amount of scholarships/grants that are not used for qualified education expenses. However, if the student’s earned income reported on a W-2, when added to the excess scholarships/grants does NOT exceed $6200, then the student doesn’t even need to file a tax return, and nothing has to be reported.

 

If the student has any other taxable income not reported on a W-2, and it exceeds $400, (not including taxable portion of scholarships/grants) then most likely it’s considered self-employment income. That will require a tax return to be filed and the student will have to pay the Self-Employment tax on that income.

 

Finally, regardless of the student’s W-2 earnings, if any taxes were withheld on those earnings and it was less than $6200, then the student should file a tax return so as to get those withheld taxes refunded.

 

 

 

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

Hi Carl,

 

Very helpful post.  I do not see a link or the Chart you mentioned.  Can you repost that Chart or send via email?

 

Many thanks, Mike

Carl
Level 15

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

@phoenixtaxes17 I just added the chart as an attachment to my post above. Apparently I forgot to do that when I made that post quite a while back. 🙂

 

PBlack
New Member

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

I thinking I’m tracking most, but I’m curious of the following:

 

I’m divorced.  Despite paying child support and 50% of every extra expense tossed at me by my child’s mother, she has always been the one to claim her as a dependent because she lives with her full time and thus them’s the rules.  I get it.  

That being said, my wife (stepmother) and I have been the ones putting significant money into her college fund.  (We put  $1200/mo in a 529 we opened for her, while her Mother puts $50/month in some other plan)  It’s very possible we will also be transferring full Post 9/11 G.I. Bill benefits to her in two years as my wife and I are done with our education but still have that benefit available (stepmother is active duty).  If my daughter moves away from home to attend the college of her choice, will we be able to claim any college expenses?  What if both sets of parents pay out of pocket expenses and she doesn’t live with either of us?

DianeW777
Expert Alumni

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

No. If you do not claim your daughter as a dependent on your tax return the expenses for college tuition, books and other qualifying education expenses will only be allowed to be claimed on the tax return she is on. 

  • If she files her own return and does not indicate that she is being claimed by someone else, only she would get the education credit.
  • If her mother claims her as a dependent on her tax return only this person would be entitled to claim the education expense.

The only way you would be entitled to the education credit on your tax return would be if you claimed her as your dependent. For more information use the links below for assistance.

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null379
New Member

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

I am trying to determine dependency for my 20 year old son who is away at college.  He works and pays for most of his incidentals and half of big things like car insurance etc.  He is covered through our health care.  However most of his support (tuition/living) came from 529 distribution - i found on line article that states disbursements are taxable on the student's taxes (if they are not used for qualified education expenses), and therefore these monies are considered part of the support that the student is covering.  We would like to have him claim himself and continue to pay more and more of his expenses but i want to verify that what I found about 529 distributions is correct.  Thank you!

 

AmyC
Expert Alumni

I paid for my daughter's tuition for college, but am not claiming her as a dependent, whose taxes will this need to be filed with?

529 Expenses should be used for college expenses. Any money that is not used toward qualified expenses, is taxable to the recipient of the form.

 

I recommend you:

look at the IRS  Worksheet for Determining Support

take the short online IRS quiz Whom May I Claim as a Dependent?

and recommend you look at another of my answers for help. in understanding how the money works.

 

Related:

@null379

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