If you can claim the child as a dependent, and the child is enrolled in a post-secondary institution (like college), you may be able to claim a tax credit or deduction based on tuition paid. To get more information on the federal education tax credits and deduction, see IRS Publication 970. Call 1-800-TAX-1040 or go towww.irs.gov. You can find Publication 970 online at https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p970.pdf.
If the child is a qualifying child for the EITC, and is in Kindergarten through 12th grade, you may be able to get a Minnesota tax credit or a subtraction for education expenses. You can get the credit even if you don’t have earned income. You can get all or part of the credit and up to 75% of eligible costs back if your adjusted gross income is below $76,000 with 1 or 2 qualifying children.
If you have more qualifying children, the maximum adjusted gross income allowance goes up by $3,000 per child. You can take the subtraction no matter what your income is.
Eligible costs include
- after school academic programs
- music lessons
- academic summer camps
- computer hardware or software ($200 maximum)
- paper, pens, pencils etc.
- private school tuition (this can only be a subtraction not a credit).
Remember! you must have documentation like receipts or invoices to prove you paid qualifying expenses.
See our fact sheet Back to School Tax Reminder: Minnesota Education Credit and Subtraction.