Key Takeaways
- Form 1098-E is sent out by loan servicers to anyone who pays at least $600 in student loan interest during the tax year.
- You can use Form 1098-E to find out how much student loan interest you paid during the tax year.
- You can deduct up to $2,500 of student loan interest from your taxable income if you meet certain conditions.
- Eligibility for the student loan interest deduction is based on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI). Your deduction may be reduced or eliminated at higher income brackets.
Who sends Form 1098-E?
The 1098-E is sent out by loan "servicers"—companies that collect loan payments. Some lenders service their own loans; others hire an outside company to handle it. Loan servicers are required to send a 1098-E to anyone who pays at least $600 in student loan interest, and they generally have to send the forms out by the end of January. If you have outstanding loans with more than one servicer, you may receive multiple 1098-E forms.
If you don’t receive the 1098-E
If you paid less than $600 in interest, you might not get a 1098-E form. If you don't receive a form, the U.S. Department of Education says you should contact your loan servicer to find out how much you paid in interest.
Check for a phone number on statements sent to you by the servicer. The home page of the servicer’s website should also have information about getting a 1098-E, advises the Education Department. If you have an online account with your student loan servicer, you may be able to login and download an interest statement as well.
TurboTax Tip:
If you don't receive Form 1098-E, call your loan servicer or log in to your online account to find out how much interest you paid. Even amounts less than $600 may be deductible.
What you use it for
You use the 1098-E to figure your student loan interest deduction. You can deduct up to $2,500 worth of student loan interest from your taxable income as long as you meet certain conditions:
- The interest was your legal obligation to pay, not someone else's.
- Your filing status is not Married Filing Separately.
- Neither you nor your spouse, if you’re filing a joint return, is claimed as a dependent on anyone else’s tax return.
- Your income is below the annual limit.
Eligibility for the student loan interest deduction is based on your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI). This is a number you calculate when you fill out your tax return. Your deduction is reduced or eliminated at higher income brackets. As of the 2024 tax year:
- For single taxpayers, the deduction is reduced once you have $80,000 of modified AGI and eliminated at $95,000.
- For Married Filing Jointly taxpayers, the deduction is reduced at $165,000 of modified AGI and eliminated at $195,000.
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