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    | Publication 17, Your Federal Income Tax | 2006 Tax Year |  
            
                  
                     
                        
                           27.  
                              			    Tax Benefits for Work-Related Education
                            This is archived information that pertains only to the 2006 Tax Year. If youare looking for information for the current tax year, go to the Tax Prep Help Area.
 
                     
                     Standard mileage rate. 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 2006 is 44½ cents a mile. This is down from 48½ cents a mile at the end of 2005. See
                        Transportation Expenses under What Expenses Can Be Deducted, for more information.
                        
                      
                     
                     Limit on itemized deductions. If your adjusted gross income for 2006 is more than $150,500 ($75,250 if you are married filing separately), your itemized
                        deductions may be
                        limited. See chapter 29 for more information about this limit.
                        
                      
                     
                     This 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) 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 able to 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 Hope 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.
                        
                      
                           
                        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.
                        First, figure your taxes using the expenses as business deductions. Then, figure your taxes again using any of the other deductions
                        and credits for
                        which you qualify. You may find that a combination of credit(s) and deduction(s) gives you the lowest tax.
                        
                      
                     
                        
                           
                              Useful Items - You may want to see:
                               
                        Publication 
                           
                              463
                                 Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses
                              970
                                 Tax Benefits for Education 
                        Form (and Instructions) 
                           
                              2106Employee Business Expenses
                              2106-EZUnreimbursed Employee Business Expenses
                              Schedule A (Form 1040)Itemized Deductions
 
                     
                   
                     
                        
                           
                              Qualifying Work- Related Education
                               You 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.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                              
                                 Education Required by  Employer or by Law Once 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, later.
                           
                         Example. You 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.
                              
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Education To Maintain  or Improve Skills If 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.
                           
                         Example. You 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.
                              
                           Maintaining skills vs. qualifying for new job.
                                   Education 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.
                           
                            Temporary absence.
                                   If 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.
                           
                            Example. You 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.
                                 
                               Indefinite absence.
                                   If 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.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Education To Meet  Minimum Requirements Education 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:
                           
                         
                           
                         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.
                           
                         Example 1. You 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.
                              
                           Example 2. You 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.
                              
                           
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Requirements for Teachers
                                     States 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. 
                              
                            Example 1. The 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.
                                 
                              
                              
                                  
                                  
                               
                                 
                                 
                                 
                                 
                               
                                 
                                     
                                     
                                   
                                       Figure 27-A. Does Your Work-Related Education Qualify?'Figure 27-A. Does Your Work-Related Education Qualify? Summary: This flowchart is used to determine if your work-related education qualifies.Start. This is the starting of the flowchart.Decision (1). Is the education required by your employer or the law to keep your present salary, status, or job?
                                  
                                    
                                       | IF Yes Continue To Decision (2) |  
                                       | IF No Continue To Decision (3) |  Decision (2). Does the requirement serve a bona fide business requirement of your employer?
                                  
                                    
                                       | IF Yes Continue To Decision (4) |  
                                       | IF No Continue To Decision (3) |  Decision (3). Does the education maintain or improve skills needed in your present work?
                                  
                                    
                                       | IF Yes Continue To Decision (4) |  
                                       | IF No Continue To Process (a) |  Decision (4). Is the education needed to meet the minimum educational requirements of your present trade or business?
                                  
                                    
                                       | IF Yes Continue To Process (a) |  
                                       | IF No Continue To Decision (5) |  Decision (5). Is the education part of a program of study that will qualify you for a new trade or business?
                                  
                                    
                                       | IF Yes Continue To Process (a) |  
                                       | IF No Continue To Process (b) |  Process (a). Your education is not qualifying work-related education.
                                  Process (b). Your education is qualifying work-related education.
                                  End. This is the ending of the flowchart.
                                  
                                 
                               Example 2. Assume 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.
                                 
                              Example 3. Assume 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.
                                 
                              Example 4. You 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.
                                 
                              Certification in a new state.
                                      Once 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.
                              
                               Example. You 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.
                                    
                                  
                        
                           
                              
                                 Education That  Qualifies You for a  New Trade or Business Education 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.
                           
                         Example 1. You 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.
                              
                           Example 2. You 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.
                              
                           Example 3. While 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.
                              
                           
                           Review 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.
                              
                            
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Teaching and Related Duties
                                     All 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. 
                              
                            
                     
                        
                           
                              What Expenses Can Be Deducted
                               If your education meets the requirements described earlier under Qualifying Work-Related Education, you can generally deduct your
                        education expenses as business expenses. If you are not self-employed, you can deduct business expenses only if you itemize
                        your deductions.
                        
                      You cannot deduct expenses related to tax-exempt and excluded income.
                        
                      Deductible expenses.
                                The following education expenses can be deducted.
                        
                         
                           
                              
                                 Tuition, books, supplies, lab fees, and similar items. 
                                 Certain transportation and travel costs. 
                                 Other education expenses, such as costs of research and typing when writing a paper as part of an educational program.  Nondeductible expenses.
                                You cannot deduct personal or capital expenses. For example, you cannot deduct the dollar value of vacation time or
                        annual leave you take to attend
                        classes. This amount is a personal expense.
                        
                         Unclaimed reimbursement.
                                If you do not claim reimbursement that you are entitled to receive from your employer, you cannot deduct the expenses
                        that apply to the
                        reimbursement.
                        
                         Example. Your employer agrees to pay your education expenses if you file a voucher showing your expenses. You do not file a voucher,
                              and you do not get
                              reimbursed. Because you did not file a voucher, you cannot deduct the expenses on your tax return.
                              
                            
                        If your education qualifies, you can deduct local transportation costs of going directly from work to school. If you are regularly
                           employed and go
                           to school on a temporary basis, you can also deduct the costs of returning from school to home.
                           
                         Attendance on a temporary basis.
                                   You go to school on a temporary basis if either of the following situations applies to you.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Your attendance at school is realistically expected to last 1 year or less and does indeed last for 1 year or less.
                                    Initially, your attendance at school is realistically expected to last 1 year or less, but at a later date your attendance
                                       is reasonably
                                       expected to last more than 1 year. Your attendance will be considered temporary up to the date you determine it will last
                                       more than 1
                                       year.
                                     
                              Note.If you are in either situation (1) or (2) above, your attendance is not temporary if facts and circumstances indicate otherwise.
                                 
                               Attendance not on a temporary basis.
                                   You do not go to school on a temporary basis if either of the following situations apply to you.
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Your attendance at school is realistically expected to last more than 1 year. It does not matter how long you actually attend.
                                    Initially, your attendance at school is realistically expected to last 1 year or less, but at a later date your attendance
                                       is reasonably
                                       expected to last more than 1 year. Your attendance is not temporary after the date you determine it will last more than 1
                                       year.
                                     
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Deductible Transportation Expenses
                                     If you are regularly employed and go directly from home to school on a temporary basis, you can deduct the round-trip costs
                              of transportation
                              between your home and school. This is true regardless of the location of the school, the distance traveled, or whether you
                              attend school on nonwork
                              days.
                              
                            Transportation expenses include the actual costs of bus, subway, cab, or other fares, as well as the costs of using your car.
                              Transportation
                              expenses do not include amounts spent for travel, meals, or lodging while you are away from home overnight.
                              
                            Example 1. You regularly work in a nearby town, and go directly from work to home. You also attend school every work night for 3 months
                                 to take a course that
                                 improves your job skills. Since you are attending school on a temporary basis, you can deduct your daily round-trip transportation
                                 expenses in going
                                 between home and school. This is true regardless of the distance traveled.
                                 
                              Example 2. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that on certain nights you go directly from work to school and then home. You can deduct
                                 your transportation expenses from your regular work site to school and then home.
                                 
                              Example 3. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that you attend the school for 9 months on Saturdays, nonwork days. Since you are attending
                                 school on a temporary basis, you can deduct your round-trip transportation expenses in going between home and school.
                                 
                              Example 4. Assume the same facts as in Example 1 except that you attend classes twice a week for 15 months. Since your attendance in school is not
                                 considered temporary, you cannot deduct your transportation expenses in going between home and school. If you go directly
                                 from work to school, you can
                                 deduct the one-way transportation expenses of going from work to school. If you go from work to home to school and return
                                 home, your transportation
                                 expenses cannot be more than if you had gone directly from work to school.
                                 
                              Using your car.
                                      If you use your car (whether you own or lease it) for transportation to school, you can deduct your actual expenses
                              or use the standard mileage
                              rate to figure the amount you can deduct. The standard mileage rate for miles driven during 2006 is 44½ cents a mile. Whichever
                              method
                              you use, you can also deduct parking fees and tolls. See chapter 26 for information on deducting your actual expenses of using
                              a car.
                              
                               
                        You can deduct expenses for travel, meals (see 50% limit on meals, later), and lodging if you travel overnight mainly to obtain
                           qualifying work-related education. Travel expenses for qualifying work-related education are treated the same as travel expenses
                           for other employee
                           business purposes. For more information, see chapter 26.
                           
                         
                              
                           You cannot deduct expenses for personal activities, such as sightseeing, visiting, or entertaining.
                           
                         Mainly personal travel.
                                   If your travel away from home is mainly personal, you cannot deduct all of your expenses for travel, meals, and lodging.
                           You can deduct only your
                           expenses for lodging and 50% of your expenses for meals during the time you attend the qualified educational activities.
                           
                            
                                   Whether a trip's purpose is mainly personal or educational depends upon the facts and circumstances. An important
                           factor is the comparison of time
                           spent on personal activities with time spent on educational activities. If you spend more time on personal activities, the
                           trip is considered mainly
                           educational only if you can show a substantial nonpersonal reason for traveling to a particular location.
                           
                            Example 1. John works in Newark, New Jersey. He traveled to Chicago to take a deductible 1-week course at the request of his employer.
                                 His main reason for
                                 going to Chicago was to take the course.
                                 
                               While there, he took a sightseeing trip, entertained some friends, and took a side trip to Pleasantville for a day.
                                 
                               Since the trip was mainly for business, John can deduct his round-trip airfare to Chicago. He cannot deduct his transportation
                                 expenses of going to
                                 Pleasantville. He can deduct only the meals (subject to the 50% limit) and lodging connected with his educational activities.
                                 
                              Example 2. Sue works in Boston. She went to a university in Michigan to take a course for work. The course is qualifying work-related
                                 education.
                                 
                               She took one course, which is one-fourth of a full course load of study. She spent the rest of the time on personal activities.
                                 Her reasons for
                                 taking the course in Michigan were all personal.
                                 
                               Sue's trip is mainly personal because three-fourths of her time is considered personal time. She cannot deduct the cost of
                                 her round-trip train
                                 ticket to Michigan. She can deduct one-fourth of the meals (subject to the 50% limit) and lodging costs for the time she attended
                                 the university.
                                 
                              Example 3. Dave works in Nashville and recently traveled to California to take a 2-week seminar. The seminar is qualifying work-related
                                 education.
                                 
                               While there, he spent an extra 8 weeks on personal activities. The facts, including the extra 8-week stay, show that his main
                                 purpose was to take a
                                 vacation.
                                 
                               Dave cannot deduct his round-trip airfare or his meals and lodging for the 8 weeks. He can deduct only his expenses for meals
                                 (subject to the 50%
                                 limit) and lodging for the 2 weeks he attended the seminar.
                                 
                               Cruises and conventions.
                                   Certain cruises and conventions offer seminars or courses as part of their itinerary. Even if the seminars or courses
                           are work related, your
                           deduction for travel may be limited. This applies to:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Travel by ocean liner, cruise ship, or other form of luxury water transportation, and 
                                    Conventions outside the North American area.  
                                   For a discussion of the limits on travel expense deductions that apply to cruises and conventions, see Luxury Water Travel and
                           Conventions in Publication 463.
                           
                            50% limit on meals.
                                   You can deduct only 50% of the cost of your meals while traveling away from home to obtain qualifying work-related
                           education. You cannot have been
                           reimbursed for the meals.
                           
                            
                                   Employees must use Form 2106 or Form 2106-EZ to apply the 50% limit.
                           
                            
                           
                           You cannot deduct the cost of travel as a form of education even if it is directly related to your duties in your work or
                              business.
                              
                            Example. You are a French language teacher. While on sabbatical leave granted for travel, you traveled through France to improve your
                                 knowledge of the
                                 French language. You chose your itinerary and most of your activities to improve your French language skills. You cannot deduct
                                 your travel expenses
                                 as education expenses. This is true even if you spent most of your time learning French by visiting French schools and families,
                                 attending movies or
                                 plays, and engaging in similar activities.
                                 
                               
                        
                           
                              
                                 No Double Benefit Allowed You cannot do either of the following.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 Deduct work-related education expenses as business expenses if you deduct these expenses under any other provision of the
                                    law. See chapter
                                    35.
                                    
                                  
                                    
                                 
                                 Deduct work-related education expenses paid with tax-free scholarship, grant, or employer-provided educational assistance.
                                    See
                                    Adjustments to Qualifying Work-Related Education Expenses, later.
                                  
                           
                         
                              
                           At the time this publication went to print, Congress was considering legislation that would reinstate the tuition and fees
                           deduction. If this
                           deduction is reinstated, you cannot take both a business deduction and a tuition and fees deduction for the same education
                           expenses for 2006. Choose
                           the one that will give you the lower tax. To find out if this legislation was enacted, and for more details, go to
                           www.irs.gov, click on More Forms and
                           Publications , and then on What´s Hot in forms and publications , or see Publication 553, Highlights of 2006 Tax Changes.
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 
                                    Adjustments to Qualifying Work-Related Education Expenses
                                     If you pay qualifying work-related education expenses with certain tax-free funds, you cannot claim a deduction for those
                              amounts. You must reduce
                              the qualifying expenses by the amount of any tax-free educational assistance you received.
                              
                            Tax-free educational assistance includes:
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    The tax-free part of scholarships and fellowships (see chapter 1 of Publication 970),
                                    Pell grants (see chapter 1 of Publication 970),
                                    Employer-provided educational assistance (see chapter 10 of Publication 970),
                                    Veterans' educational assistance (see chapter 1 of Publication 970), and
                                    Any other nontaxable (tax-free) payments (other than gifts or inheritances) received for education assistance. 
                              
                            Do not reduce the qualifying work-related education expenses by amounts paid with funds the student receives as:
                              
                            
                              
                                 
                                    Payment for services, such as wages,
                                    A loan,
                                    A gift,
                                    An inheritance, or
                                    A withdrawal from the student's personal savings. 
                              
                            Also, do not reduce the qualifying work-related education expenses by any scholarship or fellowship reported as income on
                              the student's return or
                              any scholarship which, by its terms, cannot be applied to qualifying work-related education expenses.
                              
                            
                     How you treat reimbursements depends on the arrangement you have with your employer.
                        
                      There are two basic types of reimbursement arrangements—accountable plans and nonaccountable plans. You can tell the type
                        of plan you are
                        reimbursed under by the way the reimbursement is reported on your Form W-2.
                        
                      For information about how to treat reimbursements under both accountable and nonaccountable plans, see Reimbursements in chapter 26.
                        
                      
                     
                        
                           
                              Deducting Business Expenses
                               Self-employed persons and employees report business expenses differently.
                        
                      The following information explains what forms you must use to deduct the cost of your qualifying work-related education as
                        a business expense.
                        
                      
                        
                           
                           
                           
                           If you are self-employed, you must report the cost of your qualifying work-related education
                           on the appropriate form used to report your business income and expenses (generally Schedule C, C-EZ, or F). If your educational
                           expenses include
                           expenses for a car or truck, travel, or meals, report those expenses the same way you report other business expenses for those
                           items. See the
                           instructions for the form you file for information on how to complete it.
                           
                         
                        
                        If you are an employee, you can deduct the cost of qualifying work-related education only if you:
                           
                         
                           
                              
                                 Did not receive any reimbursement from your employer,
                                 Were reimbursed under a nonaccountable plan (amount is included in box 1 of Form W-2), or
                                 Received reimbursement under an accountable plan, but the amount received was less than your expenses. If either (1) or (2) applies, you can deduct the total qualifying cost. If (3) applies, you can deduct only the qualifying
                           costs that were more
                           than your reimbursement.
                           
                         In order to deduct the cost of your qualifying work-related education as a business expense, include the amount with your
                           deduction for any other
                           employee business expenses on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20. (Special rules for expenses of certain performing artists and
                           fee-basis officials and
                           for impairment-related work expenses are explained later.)
                           
                         This deduction is subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit that applies to most miscellaneous itemized deductions.
                           See chapter 28.
                           
                         Form 2106 or 2106-EZ.
                                   To figure your deduction for employee business expenses, including qualifying work-related education, you generally
                           must complete Form 2106 or Form
                           2106-EZ.
                           
                            Form not required.
                                   Do not complete either Form 2106 or Form 2106-EZ if:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    All reimbursements, if any, were included in box 1 of your Form W-2, and
                                    You are not claiming travel, transportation, meal, or entertainment expenses. 
                                   If you meet both of these requirements, enter the expenses directly on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 20. (Special rules
                           for expenses of certain
                           performing artists and fee-basis officials and for impairment-related work expenses are explained later.)
                           
                            Using Form 2106-EZ.
                                   This form is shorter and easier to use than Form 2106. Generally, you can use this form if:
                           
                            
                              
                                 
                                    All reimbursements, if any, were included in box 1 of your Form W-2, and
                                    You are using the standard mileage rate if you are claiming vehicle expenses. 
                                   If you do not meet both of these requirements, use Form 2106.
                           
                            
                        
                           
                              
                                 Performing Artists and Fee-Basis Officials If you are a qualified performing artist, or a state (or local) government official who is paid in whole or in part on a fee
                           basis, you can deduct
                           the cost of your qualifying work-related education as an adjustment to gross income rather than as an itemized deduction.
                           
                         Include the cost of your qualifying work-related education with any other employee business expenses on Form 1040, line 24.
                           You do not have to
                           itemize your deductions on Schedule A (Form 1040), and, therefore, the deduction is not subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income
                           limit. You must
                           complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ to figure your deduction, even if you meet the requirements described earlier under Form not required.
                           
                         For more information on qualified performing artists, see Publication 463.
                           
                         
                        
                           
                              
                                 Impairment-Related Work Expenses If you are disabled and have impairment-related work expenses that are necessary for you to be able to get qualifying work-related
                           education, you
                           can deduct these expenses on Schedule A (Form 1040), line 27. They are not subject to the 2%-of-adjusted-gross-income limit.
                           To deduct these expenses,
                           you must complete Form 2106 or 2106-EZ, even if you meet the requirements, described earlier, under Form not required.
                           
                         For more information on impairment-related work expenses, see Publication 463.
                           
                         
                     
                           
                        You must keep records as proof of any deduction claimed on your tax return. Generally, you should keep your records for 3
                        years from the date of
                        filing the tax return and claiming the deduction.
                        
                      For specific information about keeping records of business expenses, see Recordkeeping in chapter 26.
                        
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