The dependent of a client has a full scholarship, meaning of course that there will be taxable amounts to report as income on line 7 of Form 1040 with the appropriate "SCH" annotation. Yes, the darn kiddie tax kicks in also.
Here is the issue: The student receives a Form 1098-T with the usual "issues" there. The scholarship amounts are always on a calendar year basis (late January payment for spring semester), whereas the corresponding qualifying expenses are. . .elsewhere.
It's my understanding that, when figuring taxable scholarships, you more or less have to do things "backward" and START with the amount of the scholarship received (and when the scholarship was "paid") and then reduce it by all eligible expenses. Yes, for all intents and purposes the exact opposite of what you do when figuring education credits et al.
(There is an excellent discussion here: http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/20...ntials/p54.htm )
At issue here is when the qualifying expenses were deemed to be "paid" by the scholarship, as apparently it is an internal swapping of funds within the bursar office. For the spring semester, the books are leveled sometime in late January of the calendar year involved.
Does anyone have any suggestions and/or cites showing exactly how to handle this two-year issue? The theory is a lot clearer to me than how to implement that theory!!
I'll leave you with this excerpt from the above link: "A student’s Form 1098-T for 2003 shows qualified tuition and expense amounts in Box 2 and scholarship and grant amounts in Box 4 that indicate some scholarship income may be taxable. From experience, the preparer knows that this university incorrectly includes January through March 2004 grants and scholarships in Box 4 but does not post qualified expenses for the same period in Box 2. Does the preparer “adjust” the Box 4 amounts and report the correct amount of scholarship income, or have the taxpayer pay the tax on the difference between Box 2 and Box 4 as shown on the Form 1098-T? Again, the answer is obvious: The preparer must prepare the most correct return based on the information available."
Thanks in advance.
FE
Here is the issue: The student receives a Form 1098-T with the usual "issues" there. The scholarship amounts are always on a calendar year basis (late January payment for spring semester), whereas the corresponding qualifying expenses are. . .elsewhere.
It's my understanding that, when figuring taxable scholarships, you more or less have to do things "backward" and START with the amount of the scholarship received (and when the scholarship was "paid") and then reduce it by all eligible expenses. Yes, for all intents and purposes the exact opposite of what you do when figuring education credits et al.
(There is an excellent discussion here: http://www.nysscpa.org/cpajournal/20...ntials/p54.htm )
At issue here is when the qualifying expenses were deemed to be "paid" by the scholarship, as apparently it is an internal swapping of funds within the bursar office. For the spring semester, the books are leveled sometime in late January of the calendar year involved.
Does anyone have any suggestions and/or cites showing exactly how to handle this two-year issue? The theory is a lot clearer to me than how to implement that theory!!
I'll leave you with this excerpt from the above link: "A student’s Form 1098-T for 2003 shows qualified tuition and expense amounts in Box 2 and scholarship and grant amounts in Box 4 that indicate some scholarship income may be taxable. From experience, the preparer knows that this university incorrectly includes January through March 2004 grants and scholarships in Box 4 but does not post qualified expenses for the same period in Box 2. Does the preparer “adjust” the Box 4 amounts and report the correct amount of scholarship income, or have the taxpayer pay the tax on the difference between Box 2 and Box 4 as shown on the Form 1098-T? Again, the answer is obvious: The preparer must prepare the most correct return based on the information available."
Thanks in advance.
FE
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