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might not be who you would expect to receive the credit.
The IRS has provided clarification as to who can claim
the education credits. These are credits allowed for
qualifying higher education costs for yourself, your
spouse, or your dependents. Under the latest rules,
if a third party-i.e., someone other than you, your
spouse or claimed dependents-pays tuition and related
fees directly to a college, the student is treated as
having made the payment directly. To further confuse
you, expenses made by a student are treated as made
by the taxpayer who claims the student as a dependent.
Thus, if a divorced parent pays tuition on behalf of
a child but the other parent has custody of the child
and is eligible to claim the child as a dependent, the
custodial parent is treated as paying the tuition directly
to the college. Thus, the custodial parent could claim
the credit.
Another added complexity: For
purposes of claiming education credits, taxpayers can
choose not to claim dependency exemptions for their
student children. Then the student can claim the education
credit on his/her own return. This could be beneficial,
for example, if the parents have a gross income too
high to actually get a tax break from the credit. A
BIG drawback to this approach: Neither the
students nor the parents can claim a dependency exemption
for the student.
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