The child of a client has received a full ( = everything!) scholarship and will enter college as a freshman this fall.
It is my understanding that there will certainly be some taxable income to the student as a result of receiving such an award.
Since I've never had a situation like this, I wanted to see if anyone else has....
I assume there will be, in addition to the infamous Form 1098-T, a separate Form 1099 for the taxable income (more or less the value of room/board/some fees/etc). Will the school calculate that amount, or should I warn the parents of the pending situation and the need for keeping very detailed records? Will "freshman year" all be 2011 taxable income, or perhaps some in 2011 and the remainder in 2012? (The scholarship is automatically renewable so long as certain performance standards are met.)
Also, this scenario should completely negate any/all potential education tax credits but, all things being equal, should not be a factor in the parents meeting the tests for claiming the dependent. With a summer job, and the taxable scholarship income, the student may have fairly sizable taxable income. But college is not deemed to be support....or is it?!? What would have to occur, in this situation, for the parents to lose their expected dependency deduction?
Thanks in advance. I'm sure some of you have likely dealt with this type of scenario in the past.
FE
It is my understanding that there will certainly be some taxable income to the student as a result of receiving such an award.
Since I've never had a situation like this, I wanted to see if anyone else has....
I assume there will be, in addition to the infamous Form 1098-T, a separate Form 1099 for the taxable income (more or less the value of room/board/some fees/etc). Will the school calculate that amount, or should I warn the parents of the pending situation and the need for keeping very detailed records? Will "freshman year" all be 2011 taxable income, or perhaps some in 2011 and the remainder in 2012? (The scholarship is automatically renewable so long as certain performance standards are met.)
Also, this scenario should completely negate any/all potential education tax credits but, all things being equal, should not be a factor in the parents meeting the tests for claiming the dependent. With a summer job, and the taxable scholarship income, the student may have fairly sizable taxable income. But college is not deemed to be support....or is it?!? What would have to occur, in this situation, for the parents to lose their expected dependency deduction?
Thanks in advance. I'm sure some of you have likely dealt with this type of scenario in the past.
FE
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