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Level 4
April 3, 2020
Question

Scholarship not allocable to 2019?

  • April 3, 2020
  • 1 reply
  • 12 views

I would like to understand if I am doing something correctly. I’ll describe the situation using a simplified example. The issue is that my child’s school provided a scholarship for the 2018-2019 academic year, divided equally between both semesters but chose to include one half of the scholarship in the 2018 1098-T and the other half in the 2019 1098-T. As I paid for both semesters in 2018, and took the AOTC in the 2018 tax year, I am now left with a 1098-T for 2019 without a corresponding expense.

 

Thus, in my simplified example:

Qualified Education Expenses for fall 2018 and spring 2019: $50,000

Scholarship (for the academic year): $30, 000

Amount billed and paid in 2018: $20,000

1098-T for 2018 shows: Box 1: 20,000; Box 5: 15,000

1098-T for 2019 shows: Box 1: 0; Box 5: 15,000

 

My child transferred to a state school in fall 2019 without any scholarship, and we have a 1098-T from that school also. However, the 1098-T from the first school discussed above with a $15,000 scholarship messes up the AOTC calculation and gives us no AOTC for 2019. In fact, my child will have an added income arising from that.

 

I redid my 2018 taxes including the 30,000 scholarship and find that I am still eligible for the AOTC.  However, my child has some extra income ~$1500 for 2018. (The child did not file in 2018 as there was no income.)

 

Would I be OK if I included this extra income from 2018 in the child's 2019 tax filing? I would like to know if this is possible and a proper way to avail of the 2019 AOTC while staying in compliance with any tax rules.

 

Thanks in advance.

1 reply

KathrynG3
Level 14
April 3, 2020

No. Unfortunately, you cannot include expenses paid in the prior year even when it was for the 2019 semester.  

See this article for more information Can I include education expenses on my 2019 return that I paid 2018 or earlier?

 

No, each year stands alone. The extra income for your child in 2018 may need to be reported in 2018. How do I prepare a prior-year tax return? Even with $1,500 of additional income, there may be no tax requirement in 2018 for your child. 

 

Click the links for additional information:

Reporting a portion of scholarship as income by TurboTax Employee Tax Expert, DanielV01

Lowdown on Education Tax Breaks

2019 IRS Publication 970 Tax Benefits for Education

@dyons

dyonsAuthor
Level 4
April 3, 2020

Hello Kathryn:

Thanks for your prompt reply. However, I am not including education expenses for 2018 in my 2019 return. Quite the opposite. I am including taxable income that would have been required to be paid in 2018 had I included the full scholarship amount in 2018. I was asking if I could include that as income in 2019.

 

I was guided by the following text provided by TT as a part of the following interview question :

"Did [[name here]]'s Aid Include Amounts Not Awarded for 2019 expenses? Schools sometimes will not report education expenses and the corresponding scholarship income on the same year's Form 1098-T. Learn more."

 

The explanatory text from "Learn More" above reads:

"Scholarship income must reduce qualified education expenses for each period of study that assistance is allocable to. However, sometimes scholarship income is not received at the same time education expenses were paid. This can cause your scholarship income to be overstated in one year and then understated in another year. If you received scholarships or grants in 2019 for expenses reported in a year other than the current year, enter an amount here to reduce your scholarship income amount. You will need to include that same amount as scholarship income in the tax year in which the education expenses are actually reported.

 

For example, in 2018 you received a 1098-T with $4,000 for your fall 2018 expenses which you reported on your 2018 tax return. In 2019 you received a 1098-T that included tuition expenses of $6,000 and $10,000 of scholarship income. $4,000 of the scholarship was actually for your 2018 expenses. You will enter $4,000 here to reduce your scholarship income to $6,000 for 2019. You may also need to recapture any education credit or deduction taken in 2018 that would have been disallowed in 2018 due to the additional $4,000 of scholarship income allocable to 2018 education expenses."

 

I was trying to follow the example above. If you look at my situation, I paid for the fall 2018 and spring 2019 expenses less full amount of scholarship in 2018. The school chose to break up the scholarship amount into one half in 2018 and another half in 2019. But the 2019 scholarship was fully used to pay for expenses incurred in 2018. Thus, I believe I am correct in choosing the option to say that the 15000 scholarship is not for expenses incurred in 2019. That's because there is NO expenses incurred in 2019 - it was all paid for in 2018!

 

In view of the above information, please can you look over my situation again and verify if I am following the example provided by TT correctly.

 

Thanks again.

MarilynG
Level 15
April 3, 2020

Since all Education Expenses and Related Scholarships were handled in your 2018 return, you are not required to enter the 1098-T from your son's first school in your tax return.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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