Although recent tax legislation has eliminated or scaled back many prized deductions for 2018 through 2025, it didn't touch the deduction for student loan interest. So the usual questions remain: Who can claim the deduction and for how much? Student loan interest deduction basics For starters, the deduction for student loan interest is claimed "above the line," so it's available to both itemizers and taxpayers who take a standard deduction. The annual deduction is limited to no more than $2,500 of the interest paid for qualified expenses like tuition and fees, room and board, books, supplies and equipment, and other necessary expenses (e.g., transportation). The loan can be for your own education, as well as for your spouse or a dependent. Whoever pays the loan is eligible to deduct the interest, subject to the following rules. Most importantly, the IRS says that student loan interest may be deductible only if all of the following apply:
The MAGI limit is indexed for inflation, although increases the last few years have been small or nonexistent. For 2018, the deduction is phased out for a MAGI between $65,000 and $80,000 for single filers or $135,000 and $165,000 of MAGI for joint filers. Once you exceed the upper threshold of this range, you can't claim any deduction. Due to the MAGI limits, students may have a better chance than their parents of salvaging some tax benefit for paying off student loan payments. Call today with questions about the student loan interest deduction, or other tax deductions for your situation.
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September 2023
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