in Education
2018558
I'm working on my son's tax return and wanted to know if he could report his grants as income to increase his education credits. It will increase his refund by $1,100. Thanks.
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
Yes, if he can allocate the grant money to "Other Educational Expanses" such as room and board and as long a the grant/scholarship is not restricted. (not given for a specific mandatory use)
The grants are Pell grants. My question is if my son can report the grant as income? I've calculated his tax return and if the grant is reported as income his Education credits increase by $1,300. Thank you.
Yes, I think I understood your question.
I will try to answer more clearly:
The answer is Yes he can claim the grant as taxable (potentially) income and free up expenses for an increased Education Credit PROVIDED the grant was not issued to be used for a specific purpose (sometime the grant will be for tuition only, but that is very uncommon) and that he has "Other Education Expenses" to allocate the grant to.
For example, Room and Board expenses are "Other Education Expense". A Taxpayer can allocate educational assistance, such as Pell grants to those expenses. If done, the educational assistance becomes (potentially) taxable income for the student, however doing so might free up "Education Expenses" that count towards a credit, like Tuition, Fees, Books, and Supplies.
Say the student had a distribution from a 529 plan that covered Room and Board. In this case the student cannot allocate the Pell grant to this same expense.
The student cannot just decide to report the Pell grant without something to match it to.
The IRS talks about "Education Expenses" (tuition, fees, books, supplies) and "Other Education Expenses" (room and board).
If the Pell grant is allocated to "Education Expenses", the Pell grant is not taxable and the expenses can't be used for a credit.
If the Pell grant is allocated to "Other Education Expenses", that amount is reported as income by the student. Additionally, if doing so frees up "Education Expenses" those expenses may be used for a credit.
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.
BrettS1
New Member
in Education
N_Br0wn
Level 2
XS39lh0
Level 1
Taxes_Are_Fun
Level 2
dfarrey54
New Member
in Education