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Get your taxes done using TurboTax
I assume the student is claimed as your dependent on your return.
1. Maybe
Tuition and books were 4,000 and scholarships were 6,000 so the student has 2,000 taxable income from that.
Room and board can offset the distribution only, it does not count to offset scholarships and does not count for an education credit.
No one needs to claim the 1099-Q.
If the student claims all 6,000 of the scholarships, you could have 4,000 towards a credit, which is the max for the American Opportunity Tax Credit. If your Modified Adjusted gross Income is over 180,000 Married Filing Jointly or 90,000 all others, you are not eligible for a credit.
2.No.
If the student claims scholarship as income, he MAY need to file depending on any other income. Scholarship income counts as "Earned" for the filing threshold.
3. No, if the student claims scholarship income, he can enter just the amount he needs to claim, in your case the 6,000.
(You can go to the Education Section under Deductions & Credits, by-pass the entry of Form 1098-T and just enter the amount of scholarship on the "Ant aid not already reported" screen). If he only is reporting 6,ooo scholarship, he will not be required to file a Federal return.
4. Correct, not an education expense.
5. Yes, have the student claim the scholarships.
Enter Form 1098-T in your TurboTax program and go through the interview. Add the books and supplies.
At the end, select "Maximize my tax break" and the program may suggest the student claim the scholarships.
If not, type letme into the search-box
Click the "Jump to letme" link
This takes you to a screen that shows your options and lets you make a selection of what credit you wish to take,
In your situation, don't enter Form 1099-Q. Keep it with your tax file along with receipts for the room and board.
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