Publication 17
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173975taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173977Standard mileage rate.(p191)
Generally, if you claim a business deduction for work-related
education and you drive your car to and from school, the amount you can deduct
for miles driven during 2010 is 50 cents per mile. This is down from 55 cents
per mile in 2009. For more information, see
Transportation Expenses under
What Expenses Can Be Deducted.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#TXMP6bf65b15This chapter discusses work-related education expenses that you
may be able to deduct as business expenses.
To claim such a deduction, you must:
- Be working,
- Itemize your deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040) if you are
an employee,
- File Schedule C (Form 1040), Schedule C-EZ (Form 1040), or
Schedule F (Form 1040) if you are self-employed, and
- Have expenses for education that meet the requirements discussed
under
Qualifying Work-Related Education.
If you are an employee and can itemize your deductions, you may
be able to claim a deduction for the expenses you pay for your work-related
education. Your deduction will be the amount by which your qualifying
work-related education expenses plus other job and certain miscellaneous
expenses is greater than 2% of your adjusted gross income. See
chapter 28.
If you are self-employed, you deduct your expenses for qualifying
work-related education directly from your self-employment income.
Your work-related education expenses may also qualify you for
other tax benefits, such as the American opportunity and lifetime learning
credits (see
chapter 35). You may qualify for these other benefits even if you do not
meet the requirements listed earlier.
Also, keep in mind that your work-related education expenses
may qualify you to claim more than one tax benefit. Generally, you may claim any
number of benefits as long as you use different expenses to figure each one.
 | At the time this publication went to print, Congress was
considering legislation that would extend the tuition and fees deduction. Your
work-related education expenses may also qualify for this benefit. To find out
if this legislation was enacted, go to
www.irs.gov/formspubs. Also see Publication 970, Tax Benefits for Education. |
 | When you figure your taxes, you may want to compare these
tax benefits so you can choose the method(s) that give you the lowest tax
liability. |
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#TXMP30f6ebe5Useful items
You may want to see:
Publication 463 Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses 970 Tax Benefits for Education Form (and Instructions) 2106:
Employee Business Expenses 2106-EZ:
Unreimbursed Employee Business Expenses Schedule A (Form 1040):
Itemized Deductions taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173988You can deduct the costs of qualifying work- related education
as business expenses. This is education that meets at least one of the following
two tests.
- The education is required by your employer or the law to keep
your present salary, status, or job. The required education must serve a bona
fide business purpose of your employer.
- The education maintains or improves skills needed in your
present work.
However, even if the education meets one or both of the above
tests, it is not qualifying work-related education if it:
- Is needed to meet the minimum educational requirements of
your present trade or business, or
- Is part of a program of study that will qualify you for a
new trade or business.
You can deduct the costs of qualifying work-related education
as a business expense even if the education could lead to a degree.
Use
Figure 27-A, later, as a quick check to see if your education qualifies.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173989Once you have met the minimum educational requirements for your
job, your employer or the law may require you to get more education. This
additional education is qualifying work-related education if all three of the
following requirements are met.
- It is required for you to keep your present salary, status,
or job,
- The requirement serves a business purpose of your employer,
and
- The education is not part of a program that will qualify you
for a new trade or business.
When you get more education than your employer or the law requires,
the additional education can be qualifying work-related education only if it
maintains or improves skills required in your present work. See
Education To Maintain or Improve Skills, below.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173991You are a teacher who has satisfied the minimum requirements
for teaching. Your employer requires you to take an additional college course
each year to keep your teaching job. If the courses will not qualify you for a
new trade or business, they are qualifying work-related education even if you
eventually receive a master's degree and an increase in salary because of this
extra education.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173992If your education is not required by your employer or the law,
it can be qualifying work- related education only if it maintains or improves
skills needed in your present work. This could include refresher courses,
courses on current developments, and academic or vocational courses.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173993You repair televisions, radios, and stereo systems for XYZ Store.
To keep up with the latest changes, you take special courses in radio and stereo
service. These courses maintain and improve skills required in your work.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173994Education to maintain or improve skills needed in your present
work is not qualifying education if it will also qualify you for a new trade or
business.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173995If you stop working for a year or less in order to get education
to maintain or improve skills needed in your present work and then return to the
same general type of work, your absence is considered temporary. Education that
you get during a temporary absence is qualifying work-related education if it
maintains or improves skills needed in your present work.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173996You quit your biology research job to become a full-time biology
graduate student for one year. If you return to work in biology research after
completing the courses, the education is related to your present work even if
you do not go back to work with the same employer.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173997If you stop work for more than a year, your absence from your
job is considered indefinite. Education during an indefinite absence, even if it
maintains or improves skills needed in the work from which you are absent, is
considered to qualify you for a new trade or business. Therefore, it is not
qualifying work-related education.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000173998Education you need to meet the minimum educational requirements
for your present trade or business is not qualifying work-related education. The
minimum educational requirements are determined by:
- Laws and regulations,
- Standards of your profession, trade, or business, and
- Your employer.
Once you have met the minimum educational requirements that were
in effect when you were hired, you do not have to meet any new minimum
educational requirements. This means that if the minimum requirements change
after you were hired, any education you need to meet the new requirements can be
qualifying education.
 | You have not necessarily met the minimum educational requirements
of your trade or business simply because you are already doing the work.
|
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174000You are a full-time engineering student. Although you have not
received your degree or certification, you work part-time as an engineer for a
firm that will employ you as a full-time engineer after you finish college.
Although your college engineering courses improve your skills in your present
job, they are also needed to meet the minimum job requirements for a full-time
engineer. The education is not qualifying work-related education.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174001You are an accountant and you have met the minimum educational
requirements of your employer. Your employer later changes the minimum
educational requirements and requires you to take college courses to keep your
job. These additional courses can be qualifying work-related education because
you have already satisfied the minimum requirements that were in effect when you
were hired.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174002States or school districts usually set the minimum educational
requirements for teachers. The requirement is the college degree or the minimum
number of college hours usually required of a person hired for that position.
If there are no requirements, you will have met the minimum educational
requirements when you become a faculty member. You generally will be considered
a faculty member when one or more of the following occurs.
- You have tenure.
- Your years of service count toward obtaining tenure.
- You have a vote in faculty decisions.
- Your school makes contributions for you to a retirement plan
other than social security or a similar program.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174003The law in your state requires beginning secondary school teachers
to have a bachelor's degree, including 10 professional education courses. In
addition, to keep the job a teacher must complete a fifth year of training
within 10 years from the date of hire. If the employing school certifies to the
state Department of Education that qualified teachers cannot be found, the
school can hire persons with only 3 years of college. However, to keep their
jobs, these teachers must get a bachelor's degree and the required professional
education courses within 3 years.
Under these facts, the bachelor's degree, whether or not it includes
the 10 professional education courses, is considered the minimum educational
requirement for qualification as a teacher in your state.
If you have all the required education except the fifth year,
you have met the minimum educational requirements. The fifth year of training is
qualifying work-related education unless it is part of a program of study that
will qualify you for a new trade or business.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174006Assume the same facts as in
Example 1
except that you have a bachelor's degree and only six professional
education courses. The additional four education courses can be qualifying
work-related education. Although you do not have all the required courses, you
have already met the minimum educational requirements.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174007Assume the same facts as in
Example 1
except that you are hired with only 3 years of college. The courses you take
that lead to a bachelor's degree (including those in education) are not
qualifying work-related education. They are needed to meet the minimum
educational requirements for employment as a teacher.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174008You have a bachelor's degree and you work as a temporary instructor
at a university. At the same time, you take graduate courses toward an advanced
degree. The rules of the university state that you can become a faculty member
only if you get a graduate degree. Also, you can keep your job as an instructor
only as long as you show satisfactory progress toward getting this degree. You
have not met the minimum educational requirements to qualify you as a faculty
member. The graduate courses are not qualifying work-related education.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174009Once you have met the minimum educational requirements for teachers
for your state, you are considered to have met the minimum educational
requirements in all states. This is true even if you must get additional
education to be certified in another state. Any additional education you need is
qualifying work-related education. You have already met the minimum requirements
for teaching. Teaching in another state is not a new trade or business.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174010You hold a permanent teaching certificate in State A and are
employed as a teacher in that state for several years. You move to State B and
are promptly hired as a teacher. You are required, however, to complete certain
prescribed courses to get a permanent teaching certificate in State B. These
additional courses are qualifying work-related education because the teaching
position in State B involves the same general kind of work for which you were
qualified in State A.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174011Education that is part of a program of study that will qualify
you for a new trade or business is not qualifying work-related education. This
is true even if you do not plan to enter that trade or business.
If you are an employee, a change of duties that involves the
same general kind of work is not a new trade or business.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174012You are an accountant. Your employer requires you to get a law
degree at your own expense. You register at a law school for the regular
curriculum that leads to a law degree. Even if you do not intend to become a
lawyer, the education is not qualifying because the law degree will qualify you
for a new trade or business.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174013You are a general practitioner of medicine. You take a 2-week
course to review developments in several specialized fields of medicine. The
course does not qualify you for a new profession. It is qualifying work-related
education because it maintains or improves skills required in your present
profession.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174014While working in the private practice of psychiatry, you enter
a program to study and train at an accredited psychoanalytic institute. The
program will lead to qualifying you to practice psychoanalysis. The
psychoanalytic training does not qualify you for a new profession. It is
qualifying work-related education because it maintains or improves skills
required in your present profession.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174015Review courses to prepare for the bar examination or the certified
public accountant (CPA) examination are not qualifying work-related education.
They are part of a program of study that can qualify you for a new profession.
taxmap/pub17/p17-147.htm#en_us_publink1000174016All teaching and related duties are considered the same general
kind of work. A change in duties in any of the following ways is not considered
a change to a new business.
- Elementary school teacher to secondary school teacher.
- Teacher of one subject, such as biology, to teacher of another
subject, such as art.
- Classroom teacher to guidance counselor.
- Classroom teacher to school administrator.