Client gets a 1098 T showing 3,000 in Box 1 and 7,000 in Scholarships in Box 3. Can he take the 3,000 as a deduction/credit for the AOTC? The scholarship was used to pay fees and tuition
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You can't double dip. Qualified expenses that were used for the tax-free scholarship can't also be used for the education credits. From the 1098-T this looks like a taxable scholarship. You need to get the tuition statement to confirm that the scholarship is really tax-free and if there were additional expenses above and beyond the scholarship that would qualify for AOTC.
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If his tuition paid was $3,000 and his scholarship was $7,000, then $3,000 of the scholarship paid his tuition and can be tax free with $4,000 of the scholarship taxable. That's why I told you to use the bursar's statement, to discover what really happened. Forms 1098-T have been inaccurate for years and often still are inaccurate even though they are supposed to report what was paid from all sources in box 1. How much did the parents/student actually pay, for instance? That's not on 1098-T. Get the bursar's statement and ask your clients questions.
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Assuming total tuition was $10k with $7k paid by scholarships and $3k paid by the student, then yes, he can take $3k towards the tuition credits.
I had one where the 1098 listed $44k of payments received in box 1 and $12k of scholarships in box 5. The tuition statement from the school listed $56K of tuition, $12k of scholarships, and $44k of payments from the student. The software erroneously netted the scholarships against the payments in box 1. I left it since the amounts are so much over the threshold, but if they weren't over the threshold, I'd have to override the software."Taxation is the price we pay for failing to build a civilized society." ~ Mark Skousen
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Originally posted by FEDUKE404
Let's try once more:
All allowable education expenses, as generally shown in Box 1 of the Form 1098-T, must first be reduced by the amount of any scholarship shown in Box 5 of the Form 1098-T.
The mere fact that the scholarship itself was not taxable changes nothing. The student was still "reimbursed" for certain expenses, and thus those reimbursed expenses cannot be considered for any education credits.
What you (apparently) are trying to do is analogous to deducting medical expenses that were actually paid by insurance.
Most professional tax software has very good "education worksheets" that, when completed, explain things quite well.
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Yes.
However, *IF* they would otherwise qualify for the American Opportunity Credit AND *IF* the scholarships allow it to be used for non-tuition, the son could claim $7000 of taxable scholarship, and that would give Dad $4000 of paid tuition to use for the American Opportunity Credit. If the son has other income and is paying high-rate Kiddie Tax, it MIGHT be better for the kid to only claim $5000, and give Dad $2000 for the American Opportunity Credit.
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