At back-to-school time, much of the focus is on the students
returning to the classroom — and on their parents buying them school supplies,
backpacks, clothes, etc., for the new school year. But let’s not forget about
the teachers. It’s common for teachers to pay for some classroom supplies out
of pocket, and the tax code provides a special break that makes it a little
easier for these educators to deduct some of their expenses.
The miscellaneous itemized deduction
Generally, your employee expenses are deductible if they’re
unreimbursed by your employer and ordinary and necessary to your business of
being an employee. An expense is ordinary if it is common and accepted in your
business. An expense is necessary if it is appropriate and helpful to your
business.
These expenses must be claimed as a miscellaneous itemized
deduction and are subject to a 2% of adjusted gross income (AGI) floor. This
means you’ll enjoy a tax benefit only if all your deductions subject to the
floor, combined, exceed 2% of your AGI. For many taxpayers, including teachers,
this can be a difficult threshold to meet.
The educator expense deduction
Congress created the educator expense deduction to allow more
teachers and other educators to receive a tax benefit from some of their
unreimbursed out-of-pocket classroom expenses. The break was made permanent
under the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act of 2015. Since 2016,
the deduction has been annually indexed for inflation (though because of low
inflation it hasn’t increased yet) and has included professional development
expenses.
Qualifying elementary and secondary school teachers and other
eligible educators (such as counselors and principals) can deduct up to $250 of
qualified expenses. (If you’re married filing jointly and both you and your
spouse are educators, you can deduct up to $500 of unreimbursed expenses — but
not more than $250 each.)
Qualified expenses include amounts paid or incurred during the
tax year for books, supplies, computer equipment (including related software
and services), other equipment and supplementary materials that you use in the
classroom. For courses in health and physical education, the costs for supplies
are qualified expenses only if related to athletics.
An added benefit
The educator expense deduction is an “above-the-line” deduction,
which means you don’t have to itemize and it reduces your AGI, which has an
added benefit: Because AGI-based limits affect a variety of tax breaks (such as
the previously mentioned miscellaneous itemized deductions), lowering your AGI
might help you maximize your tax breaks overall.
Contact us for more details about the educator expense deduction
or tax breaks available for other work-related expenses.
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