732542
I am studying in a part time MBA program while working Full time paying around 20K in tuition and 3k in other expenses and fees. I understand that I can deduct the 20K expenses as part of Unreimbursed Employee expenses (form 2106-EZ) in my itemized deduction . Can the same expense be applied towards Lifetime Learning Credit ($2000 tax refund) . As I noted, the Lifetime learning credit does not care about the Exact amount . Rather it can be applied once any money is spent towards higher degree. Please advise
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
No. You cannot double dip.
But you can do both. The first
$10,000 of expenses qualifies you for the LLC and any excess can be claimed as
employment expense.
In case this is still active, what if the mba tuition is a business expense. Would you be able to "double dip" or would you still need to split it up?
Thanks!
No, you cannot use the same education expenses for both the Lifetime Learning Credit and as a deduction for your business. The Lifetime Learning Credit allows for a credit of up to $2,000 on the first $10,000 of qualified education expenses. If your education expenses exceeded $10,000, you could deduct the remaining expenses as a business expense on a Schedule C.
Or if it provides a greater benefit, you could deduct the entire education expense as a business expense if the expense meets the following criteria:
However, education expenses that are needed to meet the minimum educational requirements of your present trade or business, or are part of a program of study that will qualify you for a new trade or business are not deductible business expenses. Please see page 66 of this link to Publication 970 for more information.
Another important fact is unreimbursed employee business expenses are no longer deductible unless you are in one of the following categories of employment:
Please click on this TurboTax article for more information.
Still have questions?
Questions are answered within a few hours on average.
Post a Question*Must create login to post
Ask questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
user17538342114
New Member
anth_edwards
New Member
user17525953115
New Member
cconnors
New Member
pete920
New Member