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Education
Did you link your 1099-Q with your 1098-T for your tuition payments? Did you have a distribution in one year and tuition expense in another?
If you know, for sure, that you have enough qualified expenses to cover the entire distribution, just don't enter the 1099-Q, at all. There is no actual IRS form that it goes on.
Otherwise, after entering the 1099-Q, you have to enter enough qualifying expenses to offset the box 1 amount. You will need to visit the education section to enter the tuition to offset the 1099-Q.
Follow these steps. Go to:
- Federal Taxes
- Deductions and Credits
- Education
- Expenses and Scholarships
If you don’t use all of the distribution for qualified expenses, you have to include the portion of earnings not used for qualifying expenses as taxable income. For example, if your 529 plan has 85 percent contributions and 15 percent earnings and you take a non-qualified distribution of $1,000, $150 of that distribution is considered earnings and therefore is taxable income.