Home About Us Media Kit Subscriptions Links Forum
EDUCATION UPDATE BLOGS
Clock Ticks Down on Billions in Tuition Tax Credits - Homeroom

Clock Ticks Down on Billions in Tuition Tax Credits

  |   Comments   |   Bookmark and Share
Among the many tax breaks waiting for Congress to rescue or let tumble off the fiscal cliff is more than $18 billion in savings for families who pay college and university tuition.

The American Opportunity Tax Credit expires on December 31st, and, with it, financial relief averaging $1,545 per recipient who pays for college.

Compounding the dilemma is the fact that an increasing portion of these tax breaks goes to families whose adjusted gross income is between $100,000 and $180,000, according to calculations by the College Board.

They get 23 percent of the savings, or $4.3 billion a year. In all, 39 percent of the tax break, which was meant to help low-income students, is being steered to families who make $75,000 or more per year.

The federal tax credit goes to about 4.5 million students and their families. They can deduct up to $2,500 of the cost of tuition, fees and course materials for the first four years of attending a postsecondary educational institution.

Read the full article here.
Reprinted with permission from The Hechinger Report.

Leave a comment

Recent Entries

Promoting Financial Literacy in New York City Schools
Guest EditorialBy Anand R. Marri, Ph.D.In these increasingly complex and uncertain economic times, many of us have tested our own…
Louisville & Queens Molloy HS: The Ties That Bind
By Mike CohenIn the “x’s and o’s” world of coach-speak, and especially in big-time college basketball, sentimentality is not something…
Technology Should Support the Science of Learning – Not the Other Way Around
By Ted Hasselbring, Ed.D.Microcomputer technology was just evolving in the early 1980s when my colleague, Laura Goin, and I started…
OpenID accepted here Learn more about OpenID
Education Update, Inc. All material is copyrighted and may not be printed without express consent of the publisher. © 2011.