If the 1098-T is marked that she is a graduate student, that is correct. There are two requirements in regards to the number of years in school and the American Opportunity Credit. The credit is only available for four years, and it is only available to undergraduate students. However, if she finished her bachelors degree in May, she should still qualify for 2016.
First, the American Opportunity Credit requirements:
- The student
must be you, your spouse, or a child whom you claim as a dependent on your
tax return.
-
The credit can only be claimed
for the first four years of post-secondary education (
defined by the IRS here as the freshman through senior years of college).
- The student must be pursuing a
degree, certificate, or other recognized credential at an Eligible
Educational Institution.
- The credit is only available
for four tax years.
- The student must be enrolled at
least half-time for a minimum of one academic period during the tax year.
- The academic period must begin
either during 2016 or during the first three months of 2017.
- You must pay the expenses
during 2016 or during the first three months of 2014.
- You can pay expenses with a
loan, including low-interest student and government subsidized loans, but
be sure to deduct the expenses rather than the loan payments.
-
Qualified education expenses include tuition and "course
materials." For this purpose, the term "course materials"
means books, supplies, and equipment needed for a course of study whether
or not the materials are purchased from the educational institution as a condition
of enrollment or attendance.
- Courses must
be taken at an eligible educational institution. Check with your school to
see if they are eligible to participate in a student aid program
administered by the Department of Education.
- You can't claim the credit if
you are claimed as a dependent on your parent's (or someone else's
return). This credit is attached to the student's exemption. If you are
filing for yourself, you can claim the credit - otherwise you can not.
- You cannot claim the credit if
you are filing using the married filing separate filing status.
- Your Modified AGI (income)
should be under 90,000 dollars, or under 180,000 dollars if you are filing
as married filing jointly.
Make sure the 1098-T
does not have box 9 checked for being a graduate student.