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Education
There are three things you can do with your Qualified educational expenses (QEE):
- Allocate some to scholarships (so that the scholarship remains tax free)
- Use some to claim an education credit
- Allocate them to the 529 distribution (1099-Q) so that it will not all be taxable
TurboTax allocates QEE, in that order, until you tell it otherwise. depending on how much room, board, book and computer expenses you have, she may have to pay some tax on the 529 distribution. But there's some manipulation you can do to lessen the effect. The interview is complicated because it has to handle multiple scenarios, and mistakes can be made.
Provide the following info for more specific help:
- Are you the student or parent.
- Is the student the parent's dependent.
- Box 1 of the 1098-T
- box 5 of the 1098-T
- Any other scholarships not shown in box 5
- Does box 5 include any of the 529/ESA plan payments (it should not)
- Is any of the Scholarship restricted; i.e. it must be used for tuition
- Box 1 of the 1099-Q
- Box 2 of the 1098-Q
- Who’s name and SS# are on the 1099-Q, parent or student (who’s the “recipient”)?
- Room & board paid. If student lives off campus, what is school's R&B charge. If the student lives at home, only the school's board charge for on campus students.
- Other qualified expenses not included in box 1 of the 1098-T, e.g. books & computers
- How much taxable income does the student have, from what sources
- Are you trying to claim the tuition credit (are you eligible)?
- Is the student an undergrad or grad student?
March 6, 2022
3:29 PM