I believe that i am correct on this. I have a client that has their two children in Catholic Grade School. They pay private tution. She was told she can get a credit or deduction for this. I have told her that there is no such credit. Please help me on this one. I cannot find anything that would support her thoughts.
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jump through hoops
Originally posted by photoman View PostShe was told she can get a credit or deduction for this.
I cannot find anything that would support her thoughts.
In cases like these I tell the client their tid-bit wrong and then explain why!
"My brother said...."
"Well, your brother is wrong. This is the correct and legal way to report..."
"Oh, your hairdresser told you....I hope your hairdresser cuts hair better than he/she doles out wrong tax advise. Here's the right way to....".
Be firm but gentle. You are the professional...not the the client....and most definately not the 'someone-told-me person!
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Actually, I think this is one of those "urban legends" that floats around. A lady came into our office this week wanting to deduct the same thing. Tuition paid to a catholic school for her child. We told her that it was not legal. She kept insisting. She finally left the office, determined to find a preparer who knew the real rules.You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say will be misquoted, then used against you.
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They need to return to their barber and ask for the code section or other authority being cited. Honestly, modern barber schools just don't delve into tax theroy like they used to.In other words, a democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it.
Alexis de Tocqueville
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Sometimes I think people get the rules a little mixed up and hear what they want to hear.
When the rule first changed a few years ago to allow the funds from an Education IRA to be used for private and religious elementary and secondary schools is when I found the firestorm of "misguided knowledge" to say the tuition could also be used for the education credits.
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Since there is tax credit for education, the advise given by others is not entirely untrue. The problem is the limitations and restrictions attached to the credit. Rather than tell clients they got bad advise, they should be told that there is such a credit, but it doesn't fit their specific situation, and then explain why.
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(as mentioned above by BP)
Actually, there is a federal education benefit for students K-12 enrolled in private school. It is the Education Savings Account (ESA) provision that allows taxpayers to make non-deductible contributions to the savings account, and then withdraw the contributions plus earnings tax free to pay for tuition, fees, books, supplies, and equipment (including computer technology or internet access). See TTB page 12-5.
Sometimes, when people hear about a tax benefit for enrolling their kid in private school, they just assume it is a deduction or a credit. Not all tax benefits are in the form of a deduction or credit. ESA benefits are in the form of being able to earn tax-free interest on savings that will be used for education, including K-12.
Instead of assuming what they heard was wrong, assume they must have miss-interpreted what they heard. Explain, yes there is a benefit, its just not a deduction or credit.Last edited by Bees Knees; 01-19-2011, 06:51 PM.
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