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- Chapter 29. Employees' Educational Expenses
-
-
-
- Introduction
-
- This chapter discusses how employees deduct their costs of work-related
- education. To figure the deduction, you must know:
-
- ∙ Whether the courses qualify,
-
- ∙ What expenses are deductible, and
-
- ∙ How to report the expenses.
-
- First, you must determine whether the courses you are taking are qualifying
- courses. Not all courses are qualifying education. Courses must meet certain
- requirements before the related expenses can be deducted. This is explained
- in the first section.
-
- If your courses qualify, you can then determine which expenses qualify to be
- deducted. Only certain expenses of education are deductible. This is explained
- in the second section.
-
- If you know which expenses qualify, you can then determine how to report
- those educational expenses. You may not be able to fully deduct all of your
- expenses. This is explained in the third section.
-
- Related publication and form.
-
- This chapter refers to the following:
-
- Publication 508, Educational Expenses
-
- Form 2106, Employee Business Expenses
-
- Qualifying Education
-
- Education must meet certain requirements before the related expenses can
- be deducted. If these requirements are met, the education is qualifying
- education. You may be able to deduct the costs of qualifying education.
- Qualifying education is explained below.
-
- Requirements. The education must:
-
- 1) Be required by your employer or the law to keep your salary, status,
- or job (and serve a business purpose of your employer), or
-
- 2) Maintain or improve skills required in your present work.
-
- These requirements are met even if the education may lead to a degree.
-
- Exception. Even if your education meets one of the requirements listed
- above, it is not qualifying education if it:
-
- 1) Is needed to meet the minimum educational requirements of your present
- trade or business, or
-
- 2) Is part of a program of study that can qualify you for a new trade or
- business, even if you have no plans to enter that trade or business.
-
- See Nonqualifying Education, later.
-
- Present work. Your education must relate to your present work. Education that
- will relate to work you may enter in the future is not qualifying education.
- Education that prepares you for a future occupation includes any education
- that keeps you up-to-date for a return to work or that qualifies you to
- reenter a job you had in the past.
-
- Temporary absence. If you stop work for a year or less and then go back to the
- same kind of work, your absence is ordinarily considered temporary. Education
- during a vacation, temporary leave, or other temporary absence from your job
- is considered related to your present job. However, after your temporary
- absence you must return to the same kind of work.
-
- Example. You quit your biology research job to become a full-time biology
- graduate student for one year. If you return to work in biology research after
- completing the courses, the education is related to your present work. You may
- even choose to take a similar job with another employer.
-
- Education Required by Employer or by Law
-
- Once you have met the minimum educational requirements for your job, your
- employer or a law may require you to get more education. This additional
- education must be required for you to keep your present salary, status, or
- job. It must serve a business purpose of your employer and not be part of
- a program that will qualify you for a new trade or business.
-
- When you take more education than your employer or the law requires, the
- additional education is qualifying only if it maintains or improves skills
- required in your present work. See Education to Maintain or Improve Skills,
- later.
-
- Example. You are a teacher who has satisfied the minimum requirements for
- teaching. Your employer requires you to take an additional college course
- each year to keep your teaching job. You take a course and pay for it yourself.
- This is qualifying education even if you eventually receive a master's degree
- and an increase in salary because of this extra education.
-
- Education to Maintain or Improve Skills
-
- If your education is not required by your employer or a law, it must maintain
- or improve skills needed in your job to be qualifying education. This includes
- refresher courses, courses on current developments, and academic or vocational
- courses. However, courses you take that qualify you for a new trade or
- business are not qualifying education. See Education to Qualify for a New
- Trade or Business, later.
-
- Example. You repair televisions, radios, and stereo sets for XYZ Store. To
- keep up with the latest changes, you take special courses in radio and stereo
- service. These courses maintain and improve skills required in your work.
-
- Nonqualifying Education
-
- If you need education to meet the minimum requirements for a job or the
- education is part of a program of study that will qualify you for a new job,
- it is nonqualifying education. You cannot deduct the costs of nonqualifying
- education. Education that is nonqualifying is explained below.
-
- Education to Meet Minimum Requirements
-
- Education needed to meet the minimum educational requirements for your present
- job is nonqualifying education. The minimum education necessary is determined
- by:
-
- 1) Laws and regulations,
-
- 2) Standards of your profession or business, and
-
- 3) Your employer's requirements.
-
- You have not necessarily met the minimum educational requirements of your
- trade or business simply because you are already doing the work.
-
- Once you have met the minimum educational requirements that were in effect
- when you were hired, you do not have to satisfy this rule again. This means
- that if the minimum requirements change, any education you need to meet the
- new requirements is qualifying education.
-
- Example 1. You are a full-time engineering student. You work part time as an
- engineer for a firm that will employ you full time as an engineer after you
- finish college. Although your college engineering courses improve your skills
- in your present job, you have not met the minimum job requirements for a
- full-time engineer, and the education is nonqualifying.
-
- Example 2. You are an accountant and you have met the minimum educational
- requirements of your employer. Your employer later changes the minimum
- educational requirements and requires you to take college courses to keep your
- job. These additional courses are not minimum requirements because you already
- have satisfied the initial minimum requirements. However, a new accountant
- coming into the firm would have to satisfy these new minimum requirements,
- and the education needed to meet the requirements would be nonqualifying.
-
- Example 3. You have your own accounting business. To improve your skills,
- you take several courses in tax accounting. You have already met the minimum
- educational requirements to be an accountant. These courses improve skills
- required in your business and are not part of a program of study that will
- qualify you for a new trade or business. These courses are qualifying
- education.
-
- Requirements for Teachers
-
- This discussion applies to teachers and others employed by educational
- organizations. The minimum educational requirement for teachers is usually
- set by the state or school district. It is based upon a minimum number of
- college hours or a college degree usually required of a person hired for
- that position.
-
- If no requirements exist, you will have met the minimum educational
- requirement when you become a faculty member. You generally will be
- considered a faculty member when one of the following occurs.
-
- 1) You have tenure.
-
- 2) Your years of service count toward obtaining tenure.
-
- 3) You have a vote in faculty decisions.
-
- 4) Your school makes contributions for you to a retirement plan other
- than social security or a similar program.
-
- Example 1. Your state law requires beginning secondary school teachers to
- have a bachelor's degree, including ten professional education courses. In
- addition, to keep the job, a teacher must complete a fifth year of training
- within 10 years from the date of hire. However, if qualified teachers cannot
- be found, a school may hire persons with only 3 years of college on the
- condition that they get the bachelor's degree and the required professional
- education courses within 3 years.
-
- Under these facts, the bachelor's degree, whether it includes the ten
- professional education courses or not, is considered the minimum
- educational requirement for qualification as a teacher in your state.
-
- If you have all of the required education except the fifth year, you have met
- the minimum educational requirements. However, if the fifth year will qualify
- you for a new trade or business, it is nonqualifying education. See Education
- to Qualify for a New Trade or Business, later.
-
- Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1. If you have a bachelor's
- degree and only six professional education courses, the additional four
- education courses would be qualifying education. Because a bachelor's degree
- is the minimum requirement for qualification as a teacher, you have already
- met the minimum requirements, even though you do not have all of the required
- courses.
-
- Example 3. Assume the same facts as in Example 1. If you are hired with only
- 3 years of college, the courses you take that lead to a bachelor's degree
- (including those in education) are nonqualifying education because they are
- required to meet the minimum education for employment as a teacher.
-
- Example 4. You have a bachelor's degree and you work as a temporary instructor
- at a university. At the same time, you take graduate courses toward an advanced
- degree. The rules of the university state that you may become a faculty member
- only if you get a graduate degree. Also, you may keep your job as an instructor
- only as long as you show satisfactory progress toward getting this degree.
- You have not met the minimum educational requirements to qualify you as a
- faculty member. The graduate courses are nonqualifying education.
-
- Certification in a new state. Once you have met the minimum educational
- requirements for your state, you are considered to have met the minimum
- educational requirements in a new state, even if you must take additional
- education to be certified in the new state. Any additional education you
- need is qualifying education.
-
- Example. You hold a permanent teaching certificate in State A and are employed
- as a teacher in that state for several years. You move to State B and are
- promptly hired as a school teacher. You are required, however, to complete
- certain prescribed courses to get a permanent teaching certificate in State
- B. These additional courses are qualifying education because the teaching
- position in State B involves the same general kind of work for which you
- were qualified in State A. You have already met the minimum requirements
- for teaching and have not entered a new trade or business.
-
- Professor's research costs. College or university professors who conduct
- research in their area of competence are considered to have met the minimum
- requirements if certain conditions are met. The research must be undertaken
- as a means of carrying out the duties expected of a professor and without
- expectation of profit apart from salary. Minimum requirements of education
- have been met, regardless of tenure, when the professor meets the school's
- criteria for employment.
-
- Education to Qualify for a New Trade or Business
-
- Education that is part of a program of study that can qualify you for a new
- trade or business is nonqualifying education. This is true even if you are not
- seeking a new job.
-
- If you change duties but still do the same general work you do now, the new
- duties are not considered a new trade or business.
-
- Example 1. You are an accountant. Your employer requires you to get a law
- degree at your own expense. You register at a law school for the regular
- curriculum that leads to a law degree. Even if you do not intend to become a
- lawyer, the education is nonqualifying because the law degree will qualify
- you for a new trade or business.
-
- Example 2. You are a general practitioner of medicine. You take a 2─week
- course to review new developments in several specialized fields of medicine.
- The course does not qualify you for a new profession. It is qualifying
- education because it maintains or improves skills required in your present
- profession.
-
- Example 3. While working in the private practice of psychiatry, you enter
- a program to study and train at an accredited psychoanalytic institute.
- The program will lead to qualifying you to practice psychoanalysis. The
- psychoanalytic training does not qualify you for a new profession. It is
- qualifying education because it maintains or improves skills required in
- your present profession.
-
- Bar or CPA Review Course
-
- Review courses to prepare for the bar examination or the certified public
- accountant (CPA) examination are nonqualifying education. These are personal
- expenses that qualify you for a new profession.
-
- Qualifications for Teachers
-
- All teaching and related duties are considered the same general kind of work.
- If you change duties in any of the following ways, it is not considered as a
- change to a new business.
-
- ∙ Elementary school teacher to secondary school teacher.
-
- ∙ Teacher of one subject, such as biology, to teacher of another subject,
- such as art.
-
- ∙ Classroom teacher to guidance counselor.
-
- ∙ Classroom teacher to school administrator.
-
- What Educational Expenses Are Deductible
-
- If your education meets the requirements described earlier under Qualifying
- Education, you can deduct your educational expenses if you itemize your
- deductions or if you are self-employed.
-
- Deductible expenses. Expenses of education that you can deduct include:
-
- 1) Tuition, books, supplies, lab fees, and similar items.
-
- 2) Certain transportation and travel costs.
-
- 3) Other educational expenses, such as costs of research and typing when
- writing a paper as part of an educational program.
-
- Nondeductible expenses. Educational expenses do not include personal or
- capital expenses. For example, you cannot deduct the dollar value of vacation
- time or annual leave you take to attend classes. This amount is a personal
- expense.
-
- Unclaimed reimbursement. If you do not claim reimbursement that you are
- entitled to receive from your employer, you cannot deduct the expenses to
- which that reimbursement applies. For example, your employer agrees to pay
- your educational expenses if you file a voucher showing your expenses. You
- do not file a voucher, and you do not get reimbursed. Because you did not
- file a voucher, you cannot deduct the expenses.
-
- Transportation Expenses
-
- If your education qualifies, you can deduct local transportation costs of
- going directly from work to school. If you are regularly employed and go
- to school on a strictly temporary basis, you can also deduct the costs of
- returning from school to home. A temporary basis is irregular or short-term
- attendance, generally a matter of days or weeks.
-
- If you go directly from home to school on a temporary basis, you can deduct
- the round-trip costs of transportation in going from your home to school to
- home. This is true regardless of the location of the school, the distance
- traveled, or whether you attend school on non-work days.
-
- Transportation expenses include the actual costs of bus, subway, cab, or other
- fares, as well as the costs of using your own car. Transportation expenses do
- not include amounts spent for travel, meals, or lodging while you are away
- from home overnight.
-
- Using Your Car
-
- If you use your car for transportation to school, you can deduct your actual
- expenses or use the standard mileage rate to figure the amount you can deduct.
- The standard mileage rate for 1992 is 28 cents per mile. If you use this
- method, you may also deduct parking fees and tolls. See Car Expenses in
- Chapter 28 for information on deducting your actual expenses of using a car.
-
- Example 1. You regularly work in Camden, New Jersey, and also attend school
- every night for 3 weeks to take a course that improves your job skills. Since
- you are attending school on a short-term basis, you can deduct your daily
- round-trip transportation expenses in going between home and school. This
- is true regardless of the distance traveled.
-
- Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that on certain nights
- you go directly from work to school and then home. You can deduct your
- transportation expenses from your regular work site to school and then home.
-
- Example 3. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that you attend the
- school for 6 consecutive Saturdays, non-work days. Since you are attending
- school on a short-term basis, you can deduct your round-trip transportation
- expenses in going between home and school.
-
- Example 4. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that you attend
- classes twice a week for one year. Since your attendance in school is not
- considered temporary, you cannot deduct your transportation expenses in going
- between home and school. However, if you go directly to school from work,
- you can deduct the transportation expenses of going from work to school.
-
- Travel Expenses
-
- You can deduct expenses for travel, meals, and lodging if you travel overnight
- to obtain qualified education and the main purpose of the trip is to attend a
- work-related course or seminar. However, you cannot deduct expenses for
- personal activities, such as sightseeing, visiting, or entertaining.
-
- If your travel away from home is mainly personal, you cannot deduct all of
- your expenses for travel, meals, and lodging. However, during the time you
- attend the qualified educational activities, you can deduct your expenses
- for meals and lodging.
-
- To find out whether a trip's purpose is mainly personal or mainly educational,
- compare the amount of time spent on personal activities with the amount of
- time spent on educational activities. If you spend more time on personal
- activities, the trip is considered mainly educational only if you can show
- a substantial nonpersonal reason for traveling to a particular location.
-
- Example 1. John works in Newark, New Jersey. He traveled to Chicago to take a
- deductible one-week course at the request of his employer. While there, he
- took a sightseeing trip, entertained some personal friends, and took a side
- trip to Pleasantville for a day. Since the trip was mainly for business,
- he can deduct his round-trip airfare to Chicago, but he cannot deduct his
- transportation expenses of going to Pleasantville. Only the meals and lodging
- connected with his educational activities can be claimed as educational
- expenses.
-
- Example 2. Dave works in Nashville and recently traveled to California to take
- a deductible 2-week seminar. While there, he spent an additional 8 weeks on
- personal activities. These facts indicate that his main purpose was to take a
- vacation. He cannot deduct his round-trip airfare or his meals and lodging for
- the 8 weeks. He can deduct only his expenses for meals and lodging for the 2
- weeks he attended the seminar.
-
- Cruises and conventions. Certain cruises and conventions offer seminars or
- courses as part of their itinerary. Even if these are work-related, your
- deduction for travel may be limited. This applies to:
-
- 1) Travel by ocean liner, cruise ship, or other form of luxury
- transportation, and
-
- 2) Conventions outside the North American area.
-
- The limits are the same that apply to cruises and conventions for other
- business purposes. These are discussed under Luxury Water Transportation and
- Conventions in Publication 463, Travel, Entertainment, and Gift Expenses.
-
- Meal Expenses
-
- If your educational expenses qualify for deduction, you can deduct the cost
- of meals that qualify as travel expenses of education.
-
- 80% limit. You can deduct only 80% of your business-related meals that were
- not reimbursed by your employer and that qualify for deduction. This includes
- meals while traveling away from home to obtain your education. You must use
- Form 2106 to apply the 80% limit.
-
- If your educational expenses include expenses for travel, see Travel Expenses
- in Chapter 28.
-
- Travel as Education
-
- You cannot deduct the cost of travel that in itself is a form of education
- even though the travel may be directly related to your duties in your work
- or business.
-
- Example. You are a French language teacher. While on sabbatical leave granted
- for travel, you traveled through France to improve your knowledge of the
- French language. You chose your itinerary and most of your activities to
- improve your French language skills. You cannot deduct your travel expenses as
- educational expenses, even though you spent most of your time visiting French
- schools and families, attending movies or plays, and learning French in
- similar activities.
-
- Expenses Relating to Tax-Exempt Income
-
- Some qualified educational assistance you receive may be tax-exempt income.
- This is income you receive that you are not required to report on your tax
- return. The rules for determining whether any item is taxable or nontaxable
- are not discussed here. See Chapter 13. Since you do not pay tax on this
- income, you may not be able to deduct the related expenses. Examples of
- tax-exempt income include scholarships, veterans' educational assistance,
- and employee assistance plans. If you received assistance from any of these
- sources, see Expenses Relating to Tax-Exempt Income in Publication 508.
-
- How to Report Educational Expenses
-
- Self-employed persons and employees report their educational expenses
- differently.
-
- This section explains how to deduct your expenses of qualified education. If
- you are an employee, you must take into account any reimbursement you receive.
- How to treat the reimbursement depends on the type of reimbursement arrangement
- and the amount of the reimbursement. For information on how to report your
- reimbursement, see Chapter 28.
-
- Self-Employed Persons
-
- Self-employed persons must report their educational expenses on the
- appropriate form (Schedule C, E, or F) used to report their business income
- and expenses.
-
- For example, if you are a sole proprietor or an independent contractor, use
- Schedule C. List your educational expenses for tuition, books, laboratory
- fees, and similar items on line 27a of Schedule C (Form 1040) and total them
- on line 27b. List your transportation and travel expenses for education on
- lines 10 and 24 of Schedule C. See the instructions for the form that you
- file for more information.
-
- Employees
-
- To deduct expenses of work-related education, you must take into account all
- of the following.
-
- ∙ Your expenses must be for qualified education.
-
- ∙ You must file Form 1040.
-
- ∙ You generally must itemize your deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040).
- Your educational expenses are deducted on line 19 as a miscellaneous
- deduction. You can deduct only your expenses over 2% of adjusted gross
- income from line 32 of Form 1040.
-
- ∙ You may need to complete Form 2106 if your expenses for education include
- meal and transportation expenses or if you receive reimbursement from
- your employer.
-
- Note.
-
- If your adjusted gross income is more than $105,250 ($52,625 if you are
- married filing separately), your deduction for itemized deductions may
- be limited. See Chapter 21.
-
- If you are a qualified performing artist, you may deduct work-related
- educational expenses even if you do not itemize your deductions. See
- Performing Artists in Publication 529, Miscellaneous Deductions, for
- more information.
-
- Form 2106. Whether you must report your educational expenses on Form 2106
- depends primarily on the type of expense, the type of reimbursement or
- allowance arrangement, and the amount of reimbursement. Reimbursement
- arrangements are explained in Chapter 28.
-
- Employee business expenses, including educational expenses, are reported on
- Form 2106. Use this form to figure your allowable travel, transportation,
- meal, and other work-related expenses of education. To deduct these expenses,
- complete Part I of Form 2106 and enter the result on Schedule A (Form 1040)
- as a miscellaneous itemized deduction. (Use Part II only if you have personal
- vehicle expenses.) Part I of Form 2106 has three steps:
-
- ∙ Step 1 shows your total business expenses. Lines 1 through 3 are for
- travel and transportation expenses that are related to your qualifying
- education. Line 4 is for educational expenses such as tuition and books.
- Line 5 is for meals while traveling away from home to obtain education.
-
- ∙ Step 2 shows amounts your employer gave you (your reimbursement) for the
- expenses listed in Step 1.
-
- ∙ Step 3 figures the expenses to deduct on Schedule A (Form 1040). If your
- employer did not reimburse you for work-related meals, your deduction is
- limited to 80% of your expenses. This allowable amount is figured on
- lines 8 through 10. The allowable meal expenses are added to your other
- unreimbursed expenses and the total is entered on line 19 of Schedule A
- (Form 1040).
-
- Exception. You do not have to complete Form 2106 if either of the following
- applies:
-
- ∙ Your reimbursements not included in Box 10 of Form W─2 are at least as
- much as your deductible expenses. (Do not deduct the expenses or report
- the reimbursement as income.)
-
- ∙ You are not deducting any expenses for travel, transportation, meals,
- or entertainment, and you were not reimbursed for any expenses.
- (Unreimbursed expenses for tuition, books, and lab fees can be listed
- directly on line 19 of Schedule A of Form 1040.)
-
- Even if you were not reimbursed, you must file Form 2106 if you are a
- qualified performing artist or an individual with a disability claiming
- impairment-related work expenses. See Publication 529, Miscellaneous
- Deductions.
-
- Schedule A (Form 1040). Unreimbursed educational expenses, or expenses that
- are more than the amount reimbursed by your employer, are entered on line 19
- of Schedule A (Form 1040). Generally, you must first use Form 2106 to compute
- the amount to enter on line 19. To claim these educational expenses, you must
- be able to itemize your deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040). (If you're not
- sure whether you can itemize, see Chapter 20.)
-
- You can deduct only the amount of miscellaneous deductions that is more than
- 2% of your adjusted gross income. This 2% limit is applied after all other
- deduction limits have been applied (such as the 80% limit on meal expenses,
- discussed earlier).
-
- Recordkeeping
-
- You must keep proof to support your claim to a deduction as long as your
- income tax return can be examined. Generally, you should keep your records
- for 3 years from the date of filing the return and claiming the deduction.
- For specific information about keeping records of business expenses, see
- Recordkeeping in Chapter 28.
-
-