The Secret Document Checklist a college student should gather for taxes

For a college student client, the tax preparer will typically need a combination of personal documents, income statements, education-related forms, and potentially deductions or credit information. Here’s a checklist of documents a college student should gather:

Personal Information:

Social Security Number (SSN) or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN)

Bank account information (for direct deposit of refunds)

Driver’s license or state ID (may be required for e-filing)

Income Documents:

W-2 forms: From any job(s) held during the tax year

1099 forms: If the student worked as an independent contractor (1099-NEC, 1099-MISC, 1099-K)

Scholarship or fellowship information: Any taxable portions of scholarships or fellowships

Investment or savings interest (1099-INT): From savings accounts or investments

1099-DIV forms: If the student received dividends from investments

1098-T: Tuition statement from the college (shows education expenses that may qualify for education tax credits)

1099-Q: If distributions were taken from a 529 plan or a Coverdell Education Savings Account (ESA)

Education-related Documents:

Receipts for textbooks, supplies, and equipment: Required by some courses of study (for deductions or credits)

Student loan interest statement (1098-E): If the student or parents paid interest on student loans

Room and board expenses: If relevant for scholarship income reporting or education savings plan use

Deductions and Credits:

Details of any tuition, fees, and related expenses: These can help in determining eligibility for credits like the American Opportunity Credit or the Lifetime Learning Credit

Form 8863: Education credits, if available from previous filings

Receipts for charitable donations, if applicable

Parental Information:

Parents’ tax return (if the student is still a dependent and parents claim them)

Details about dependency status: Whether the student is claimed as a dependent by parents or not

Having these documents will ensure the tax preparer can accurately assess the student’s financial situation and apply any available deductions or credits.

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