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May 27, 2007 - I'm a teacher and ocassionaly receive advertisements for job-related courses in exotic locals. Are these courses tax deductible?If the education comes from the travel itself, the expenses aren't deductible. For example, a French teacher can't deduct the cost of a trip to France to maintain familiarity with the French language and culture. Education in the form of a course that is related to your job as a teacher or professor may be deductible, but only if the course either maintains or improves skills that you need for your job, or meets your employer's requirements or the requirements of applicable law or regulations to maintain your job or salary. But a course won't be deductible if it is needed to meet the minimum requirements to be a teacher. “Minimum requirements” refers to the college degree or minimum number of college hours required of a person hired as a teacher. For example, if state law requires beginning high school teachers to have a bachelor's degree and to complete a fifth year of training within 10 years of hire, the costs of the getting the bachelor's degree won't be deductible, but the costs of the fifth year will. Any additional courses you need to be certified in another state will qualify for deduction. Additionally, a change from elementary school teacher to secondary school teacher, from teacher of one subject to teacher of another, or from classroom teacher to guidance counselor or school administrator also qualify. If a course you've taken qualifies under the above rules, you can deduct your course expenses, such as tuition, fees, books, and supplies. Whether you can also deduct your travel, meal, and lodging expenses while away from home to take the course depends on the main purpose of the trip. If the trip was mainly job-related, you can deduct the costs of travel, meals, and lodging, except for the part that is allocable to personal activities, such as sightseeing, recreation, or social visiting. If the trip was mainly personal, travel expenses aren't deductible, and meals and lodging are deductible only for the time that you attend the qualifying courses. Determining the purpose of the trip is largely a matter of comparing the time spent on job-related activities with time spent on personal activities. To illustrate how these rules work, let's examine Ann, the high school teacher. Ann traveled to Thailand, Cambodia, and Indonesia to take a course on Southeast Asian religious traditions. Because she was an English teacher and chaired her high school's English department, was able to show how she applied what she learned to work more effectively with her Asian students and introduce new literary works into the curriculum. Her case was aided by the fact that the course featured lectures by university professors and a substantial reading list. While the course did include visits to tourist sites, each visit served an educational purpose. Ann was also able to prove that she spent most of her travel time on course activity. Because her trip was mainly job-related, Ann could deduct all of her expenses, including tuition, airfare, meals, and lodging. Ann's successful experience suggests guidelines that you can follow to help you nail down the deduction for job-related education:
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