12-22-2020, 10:10 PM
(12-22-2020, 07:42 PM)udi Wrote: Not tax advice. For entertainment and discussion purposes only.Claim it as a donation
TESU should mail or provide via download a 1098-T. If the residency fee waiver qualifies, it should be included on that form. If anybody has received this already with the residency waiver included, this would answer the question.
However, the rules for the AOTC, Student loan interest deduction, and Liftetime Learning Credit, etc are different. For example:
For AOTC only, expenses for books, supplies and equipment the student needs for a course of study are included in qualified education expenses even if it is not paid to the school.
(https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/i...d-expenses)
I raise this example because some expenses qualify under AOTC, but not Lifetime Learning Credit, etc. It is also important to note that not all fees are deductible, even if required and or paid directly to the school.
The residency-waiver fee is interesting because it is technically not mentioned specifically, nor are graduation fees. The bigger issue is that not everyone is required to pay them -- leading me to believe that a residency-waiver fee (an anomaly, really) would not be covered. However, I'm not sure if these fees typically get reported on the the 1098-T forms anyway because perhaps the rules were never meant to split such hairs -- you expect people to pay what they need to in order to graduate.
If TESU got the okay from the IRS to include this on the form at one point, I would think it would be fair game. If I had to guess, I would say that it does NOT qualify, but I could see an argument being made. Consider how this is different from SSAF fees and Enrollment fees at Excelsior. Seems unfair that those similar fees could (potentially) qualify, where TESU's do not. This also makes it murky because the fee at TESU is almost a delayed enrollment fee required for graduation. Though, it technically only applies to some people ...
Anyway, my guess would be that the TESU residency fee would not be included as part of tuition and fees. Curious what has happened in the past. Also, it's interesting and another consideration for anyone needing a tax break for these fees.

If it was ever on the form at any point in the past, it establishes precedence and if it isn't specified anywhere of any changes then students could actually make a point to include it. But one has to be able to prove it and able to provide proof that no changes have occurred that preclude doing so.