Tax
breaks help teachers pay classroom costs
By Chris Kerns
Contributing Writer
Union County Post
With the new school year now under way,
the IRS reminds teachers, parents and students that saving
receipts and
keeping good records can help them take advantage of
various education-related deductions and credits on their
2007
federal income tax return.
“
The start of the school year is a good time to remind parents,
students and teachers to save all receipts related to tax-advantaged
education expenses,” said IRS Acting Commissioner
Linda Stiff. “Good recordkeeping makes sense because
it can help avoid missing a deduction or credit at tax
time.”
Deductions reduce the income on which tax is figured.
Credits reduce the overall tax. Though both can lower
a person’s
year-end tax bill or increase their refund, credits normally
result in greater tax savings.
The educator expense deduction allows teachers and other
educators to deduct the cost of books, supplies, equipment
and software used in the classroom. Eligible educators
include those who work at least 900 hours during a school
year as a teacher, instructor, counselor, principal or
aide in a public or private elementary or secondary school.
Worth up to $250, the educator expense deduction is available,
whether or not the educator itemizes their deductions
on Schedule A. In tax-year 2005, teachers and educators
deducted
just over $893 million of these out-of-pocket classroom
expenses. Under current law, this deduction is scheduled
to expire at the end of this year.
Three key tax breaks – the Tuition and Fees Deduction,
the Hope Credit and the Lifetime Learning Credit – help
parents and students pay for the cost of post-secondary
education. All three are available, regardless of whether
an eligible taxpayer itemizes their deductions. Under
current law, the tuition and fees deduction is scheduled
to expire
at the end of this year, but the two credits remain in
effect. In tax-year 2005, taxpayers claimed tuition and
fees deductions totaling nearly $11 billion and education
credits of almost $6.2 billion.
Normally, a taxpayer can claim tuition and required enrollment
fees paid for their own and their dependent’s college
education. A taxpayer cannot take both an education credit
and the tuition and fees deduction for the same student
in the same year. Income limits and other special rules
apply to each of these provisions. Education credits
are claimed on Form 8863, and the tuition and fees deduction
for 2007 will be claimed on new Form 8917.
IRS Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Education, can
help eligible parents and students understand the special
rules
that apply and decide which tax break to claim. The publication
also describes other education-related tax benefits,
including qualified tuition programs (also known as 529
plans), the
student loan interest deduction, Coverdell education
savings accounts and the education savings bond program.
Publication 970 is posted on IRS.gov or can be obtained
by calling the IRS at 1-800-TAX-FORM (829-3676). |