OVERVIEW
TurboTax can help you take advantage of tax breaks to ease the financial burden of sending kids to college, including tax credits, tuition deductions, tax-free savings and more.
Tax breaks for college
The most generous tax breaks for college costs are the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) and the Lifetime Learning Tax Credit (LLTC), which offset your tax bill dollar-for-dollar compared to a tax deduction that merely reduces the amount of income subject to tax.
The American Opportunity Tax Credit
The American Opportunity Tax Credit is based on 100% of the first $2,000 of qualifying college expenses and 25% of the next $2,000, for a maximum possible credit of $2,500 per student.
For 2022, you can claim the AOTC for a credit up to $2,500 if:
- Your student is in their first four years of college.
- Your income doesn't exceed $160,000 if you are married filing a joint return.
- Your income doesn't exceed $80,000 as a single taxpayer.
- Above these income levels, the credit is phased out.
The AOTC can be claimed for as many eligible students as you have in your family. For example,
- If you have three kids who are all in their first four years of college, you can potentially qualify for up to $7,500 of American Opportunity Tax Credits.
- $2,500 x 3 = $7,500
Up to 40% of the AOTC amount is refundable. That means you can collect at least some of any credit amount that is left over even if your federal income tax bill has been reduced to zero.
The Lifetime Learning Tax Credit
The Lifetime Learning Tax Credit—which can be as much as $2,000 per tax return, based on 20% of up to $10,000 of qualifying higher-education expenses—is available for an unlimited number of years for just about any degree or non-degree course.
- You can only claim one LLTC per year, no matter how many students you have in your household.
- For 2022, the income limit for is $180,000 if you are married filing a joint return.
- For 2022, the income limit is $90,000 for single taxpayers.
- Above these income levels, the credit is phased out.
You cannot claim both the American Opportunity Tax Credit and the Lifetime Learning Tax Credit for the same student in the same year.
Dependency rules
If your income is too high to claim the AOTC or LLTC and your student has enough taxable income of their own such that they would owe federal income tax, you can elect to:
- Forego claiming them as a dependent
- Let the student claim the credit on their own tax return
In this case, the parent does not get to claim the student as a dependent and therefore will miss out on any child or dependent credit. However, the value of the education credit may make it preferable for the parent to forfeit their claim of the child.
If the student can be claimed as a dependent on someone else's tax return (i.e. the parent's tax return) then the student is not eligible to claim the refundable portion of the AOTC on their own tax return.
Tuition and Fees Deduction (for tax years before 2021)
Another option is to claim a deduction of up to $2,000 or up to $4,000 of qualified tuition and mandatory enrollment fees, depending on your income.
- You do not have to itemize your deductions to claim the tuition and fees deduction.
- You cannot claim the deduction in the same year that you claim the American Opportunity or Lifetime Learning credit for the same student’s expenses.
- The Tuition and Fees Deduction has been extended through the 2020 tax year.
The above-the-line tuition deduction allows:
- Married couples with incomes of $130,000 or less ($65,000 for single taxpayers) to deduct up to $4,000 in qualifying expenses, and
- Married couples earning $130,000 to $160,000 ($65,000 to $80,000 for single taxpayers) to deduct up to $2,000.
Tapping tax-free college savings
You can take tax-free distributions for qualified education expenses from your child's 529 College Savings Plan or Coverdell Education Savings Account.
- You can use tax-free withdrawals from Coverdell ESAs and 529 College Savings Plans to pay qualified education expenses in the same year as the American Opportunity or Lifetime Learning credits, as long as you don't use them for the same expenses.
Tax-free U.S. Savings Bond interest
Interest earned on Series EE or Series I U.S. Savings Bonds issued after 1989 can be tax-free if the bond is redeemed and used to pay for qualified college tuition and fees.
- For 2022, this tax break begins to phase out at $128,650 of modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) for married joint filers ($85,800 for single taxpayers).
- The tax-free Savings Bond provision cannot be used for the same expenses that are used to claim other educational tax breaks such as the American Opportunity or Lifetime Learning credits.
TurboTax can help you take advantage of a wide variety of tax breaks on college costs.
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