Publication 970
taxmap/pubs/p970-042.htm#en_us_publink1000178586
To determine the amount of your distribution that is not subject to the 10%
additional tax, first figure your adjusted qualified education expenses. You do
this by reducing your total qualified education expenses by any tax-free
educational assistance, which includes:
- Expenses used to figure the tax-free portion of distributions
from a Coverdell education savings account (ESA) (see
chapter 7),
- The tax-free part of scholarships and fellowships (see
chapter 1),
- Pell grants (see
chapter 1),
- Veterans' educational assistance (see
chapter 1),
- Employer-provided educational assistance (see
chapter 11), and
- Any other nontaxable (tax-free) payments (other than gifts
or inheritances) received as educational assistance.
Do not reduce the qualified education expenses by amounts paid
with funds the student receives as:
- Payment for services, such as wages,
- A loan,
- A gift,
- An inheritance given to either the student or the individual
making the withdrawal, or
- A withdrawal from personal savings (including savings from
a qualified tuition program (QTP)).
If your IRA distribution is equal to or less than your adjusted
qualified education expenses, you are not subject to the 10% additional tax.
taxmap/pubs/p970-042.htm#en_us_publink1000178592In 2010, Erin (age 32) took a year off from teaching to attend
graduate school full-time. She paid $5,800 of qualified education expenses from
the following sources.
| | Employer-provided educational assistance
(tax free)
| $5,000 | |
| | Early distribution from IRA (includes $500 taxable earnings)
| 3,200 | |
| | | | |
Before Erin can determine if she must pay the 10% additional
tax on her IRA distribution, she must reduce her total qualified education
expenses.
| | Total qualified education expenses | $5,800 | |
| | Minus: Tax-free educational assistance | −5,000 | |
| | Equals: Adjusted qualified
education expenses (AQEE)
| $ 800 | |
Because Erin's AQEE ($800) are more than the taxable portion
of her IRA distribution ($500), she does not have to pay the 10% additional tax
on any part of this distribution. However, she must include the $500 taxable
earnings in her gross income subject to income tax.
taxmap/pubs/p970-042.htm#en_us_publink1000178595Assume the same facts as in
Example 1, except that Erin deducted some of the contributions to her
IRA, so the taxable part of her early distribution is higher— $1,000. This
must be included in her income subject to income tax.
The taxable part of Erin's IRA distribution ($1,000) is larger
than her $800 AQEE. Therefore, she must pay the 10% additional tax on $200, the
taxable part of her distribution ($1,000) that is more than her qualified
education expenses ($800). She does not have to pay the 10% additional tax on
the remaining $800 of her taxable distribution.