Looking for a tax professional who can help my son (and me) to figure this out

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  • #82457 Reply
    Mylene

      In a nutshell, he’s a college student who has full-ride scholarship that’s paid directly to his bank account, and the scholarship is reported as 1099-MISC.

      This amount is used to pay his college room & boarding, and his travel expenses to summer internship which is also part of his scholarship program.

      We tried HRBlock and TurboTax but we’re stuck, not happy with the result, don’t know if we’re doing it right.

      Please let me know If you’ve handled this niche and if it’s ok to message you.

      Willing to pay reasonable fees to the tax professional, relative to this student’s scholarship amount.

      #82458 Reply
      Jen

        Sounds like you need to pay tax on the scholarship but don’t want to? Not sure what your actual question is.

        #82459 Reply
        Emily

          I’m an expert in an analogous issue for graduate students (l don’t prep returns though).

          The trick is that the software needs to understand that the income is scholarship income, not self-employment or “other” income, which is difficult when reported on a 1099-MISC.

          I suggest using FreeTaxUSA instead of the software you mentioned.

          #82460 Reply
          Teresa

            Paying taxes is still a way better deal than paying for the full cost of schooling. Don’t be afraid to pay the taxes.

            #82461 Reply
            Leslie

              Is this the SMART scholarship by chance? Regardless, the scholarship amount that exceeds tuition, books, and fees is taxable.

              #82462 Reply
              Chantal

                We’re in the same boat, kid with no income but full ride plus has to pay $3k+ in taxes. I’m glad someone let us know in advance and try to share that info too because if they spend it, they’re in for a shock.

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