- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
1098-T - Lifetime credit when tuition fully covered by a government grant?
Entering a 1098-T for one of my kids. He took a training program at a community college, with tuition covered by government grant. He's had these before, never gotten a 1098-T, but for 2022 he did. So box 1 say, $3000, box 5, $3000. Turbotax did the obvious credits analysis, and determined he was eligible for a Lifetime education credit (20%) of the amount. Great, except that until we got the form, we had no idea what the class cost, and besides, he had no net expense for the class. I see on Form 8863 how the calculation was done, but I don't understand how one gets a credit when there was no out of pocket.
So 2 questions;
1. Why would the school create the 1098-T this year when it never has for a grant paid for course before? He did get them from the school when he earned a degree. Has tax reporting requirements for this changed?
2. How could he 'earn' a credit when he had no net tuition expense? Is this a quirk in Fed tax law or is there a problem in TT?
3. If I'm right, what is the best way to eliminate the 'credit' in the 1040 - can I simply delete the 8863, or will TT block filing thinking that I made a mistake?
A major tax firm says;
"Since tax-free scholarships don’t have to be repaid, amounts paid for by scholarships aren’t considered paid by you or the student; therefore tax credit for education cannot be claimed."
Another site says;
"You can claim this credit for any borrowed funds, but not for costs that were covered by a scholarship or grant."
To me this is clearly a bug, and that TT should be applying net tuition expense to determine if it should even ask you about credits, and if it proceeds, only using the net to calculate any credit.