in Education
My 1098-T shows that the scholarships or grants (box 5) I received are larger than the amount billed by the school (box 2). It seems that when I am trying to do my taxes, turbotax is taking the difference of these two boxes and adding it to my income, but my scholarship is a full-tuition scholarship that ONLY covers tuition expenses. I never receive this money, and it is only applied to cover my tuition. It seems that the school reported the 2017 spring semester bill in my 2016 1098-T.
Does this count as income even though my scholarship only covers tuition, or am I doing something wrong?
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No, you’re not doing anything wrong – this counts as income.
When your reported scholarships or grants amount (Box 5) exceeds the amounts billed for qualified tuition and related expenses (Box 2), the difference must be reported as taxable income on your federal return. TurboTax is performing this calculation for you.
For more information, see “Worksheet 1-1, Taxable Scholarship and Fellowship Grant Income” on page 7 of IRS Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Education.
My daughter has scholarships that exceed her qualified tuition on her 1098t. We have entered her 1098t exactly as it appears. However turbo tax is putting the full amount of the scholarships in income and not reducing it by the amount of qualified tuition in box 1. My understanding is that only the amount of scholarships that exceed the qualified tuition should be placed in income.
Understand this:
All scholarships, grants and 529 distributions received in a tax year are treated as taxable income *INITIALLY*. The taxability of that educational aid is then offset by the *qualified* education expenses they are used to pay for. So if you have any amount of schoarships or grants not used for a qualified education expenses in the same tax year it was awarded to you then that excess amount is taxable income to you *UNLESS* the college did not physically pay it to you and is holding it to apply to your qualified expenses in the next tax year.
Thank you. Yes this is also my understanding. However my issue is that Turbo tax is including the full amount of the scholarship in income and not reducing it by the qualified tuition. For example, our 1098t has 25,000 of qualified tuition and 30,000 in scholarships. My understanding is 5000 should be included in income. Turbo tax is adding the full 30,000 to income and then calculating a 4000 tuition deduction.
You need to go through the entire Education section to indicate that you did have the expenses for your tuition.
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