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Claiming Tuition For Post-Secondary Education

By Evelyn Jacks

If you have a university bound student in your home this year, there is plenty of good tax news to help with the students. Once again, it's important to be aware and remember to keep all receipts!

Post-secondary students may claim a non-refundable tax credit on their tax credit featuring three parts: the tuition amount, the education amount and the relatively new amount for textbooks. Better yet, if not taxable, the claim for the tuition, textbook and education amounts may be transferred from a student to the supporting individual. Under or unused amounts may be carried forward to future years when the student has more income.

Tuition fees Claimable. Students may claim the fees paid for courses taken in the tax year, which is the calendar year. To qualify, each tuition fee must be more than $100 and must be paid as follows:

  • for courses at a post-secondary school level paid to a university, college, or other educational institution in Canada,
  • paid to an educational institution in Canada certified by the Minister of Human Resources Development for courses (if the student was 16 or older in the year) to develop or improve skills in an occupation,
  • for courses at a post-secondary school level paid to a university, college, or other educational institution in the United States if the student lived in Canada near the border throughout the year and commuted to the school, and
  • if the student was in full-time attendance at a university outside Canada, for courses that were at least 13 consecutive weeks long, and that will lead to a degree.

Eligible tuition fees include admission fees, charges for the use of library or laboratory facilities, examination fees, application fees (but only if the student later enrolls in the institution), charges for a certificate, diploma, or degree, mandatory computer service fees, academic fees, the cost of any books that are included in the total fees for a correspondence course, and fees, such as athletic and health services fees when such fees are required to be paid by all students. If not all students are required to pay them, then amounts eligible are limited to $250.

Non-qualifying tuition fees. You should also be aware that certain costs cannot be claimed; specifically if:

  • they are paid or reimbursed by an employer, where the amount is not included in the employee's income,
  • paid by a federal, provincial, or territorial job training program where the amount is not included in income, or
  • the fees were paid (or are eligible to be paid) under a federal program to help athletes, where the payment or reimbursement has not been included in income.

In addition, the following are not deductible as tuition fees: students' association fees, medical care, transportation and parking, meals and lodging, goods of lasting value that you will keep, such as a computer, microscope, uniform, or an academic gown, and initiation or entrance fees to a professional organization

Filing Requirements. The claim for these credits originates on the student's Schedule 11 Federal Tuition, Education, and Textbook Amounts. Claim the amounts transferred from a child to a supporting parent or grandparent on line 324. If the transfer is to the student's spouse, complete Schedule 2 Federal Amounts Transferred From Your Spouse or Common-law Partner.

Tax Receipting. The educational institution will issue an official receipt or Form T2202 Education and Textbook Amounts Certificate or Form T2202A Tuition. Education, and Textbook Amounts Certificate showing the amount of tuition paid.

Universities outside Canada may send the student Form TL11A Tuition, Education, and Textbook Amounts Certificate - University Outside Canada, TL11C Tuition, Education, and Textbook Amounts Certificate - Commuter to the United States or TL11D Tuition Fees Certificate - Educational Institutions Outside Canada for a Deemed Resident of Canada. Flying schools may send Form TL11B Tuition Fees Certificate - Flying School or Club.

 

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All articles in this Tax Facts & Planning section of TMXmoney.com are derived from the book "Master Your Taxes" by Evelyn Jacks, published by The Knowledge Bureau. Mastering your taxes involves two pain points: time and money! No one has a lot of time, yet that is what it appears to take to figure it out or understand it; worse it seems to need expensive professional advice to get it right. This book will help you soothe that pain by showing you simple principles to save time and money on your largest lifetime expense - taxes. Click here to order your copy today.

 

 

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