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What Is the Student Loan Interest Deduction?
The student loan interest deduction allows you to deduct up to $2,500 from your taxable income.
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Ryan Lane is an editor on NerdWallet’s small-business team. He joined NerdWallet in 2019 as a student loans writer, serving as an authority on that topic after spending more than a decade at student loan guarantor American Student Assistance. In that role, Ryan co-authored the Student Loan Ranger blog in partnership with U.S. News & World Report, as well as wrote and edited content about education financing and financial literacy for multiple online properties, e-courses and more. Ryan also previously oversaw the production of life science journals as a managing editor for publisher Cell Press. Ryan is located in Rochester, New York.
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The student loan interest deduction is a tax break for college students or parents who took on debt to pay for higher education. It allows you to deduct up to $2,500 in interest paid from your taxable income.
Student loan interest is deductible if your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) was less than $80,000 (for single filers) or $165,000 (if filing jointly). If your MAGI was between $80,000 and $95,000 (for single filers) or $195,000 (if filing jointly), you can deduct less than than the maximum $2,500.
The student loan interest deduction is not an itemized deduction — it's taken above the line. That means it's subtracted from your taxable income to save you money.
Who can deduct student loan interest?
If your MAGI is less than $95,000 ($195,000 if filing jointly), you can deduct student loan interest paid on federal and private student loans in the following instances:
You used the loan for qualified education expenses. These include tuition, room and board, books and other necessary expenses, such as transportation.
You're making interest payments while still in school. This deduction isn't just for graduates: If you’re making student loan payments while still in school, you may be able to take this deduction, too.
You took out the loan for a dependent. If you took out a loan in your own name for someone else — like a parent PLUS loan for your child, for example — you can take the student loan interest deduction.
You were obligated to repay the loan. Even if your wages are being garnished or you're otherwise legally responsible for the loan, you can still deduct any interest you've paid off.
You can't claim the student loan interest deduction if your filing status is married filing separately. You're also ineligible if you’re listed as a dependent on someone else's tax return. A parent cannot claim the interest deduction — even if the student is claimed as a dependent — if the parent is not legally obligated to pay interest on the loan.
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The student loan interest deduction is an adjustment to your income. To claim the deduction, you’ll need to obtain Form 1098-E from your lender and enter your deduction amount when completing your tax paperwork.
Get Form 1098-E. If you paid more than $600 in interest in 2024, you will automatically receive form 1098-E — a student loan interest deduction form — in the mail or by email. If you don't receive a student loan interest deduction document, ask your student loan servicer or private lender to send it to you. A copy of the form, as well as details on how much interest you paid, may also be available in your online account portal.
When you repay student loans, you pay down the original balance and the interest that has accrued on that balance. You can deduct that interest on your taxes, but the entire student loan payment amount is not tax-deductible.
For example, say you have a $29,000 student loan with an interest rate of 5%. At the start of the standard 10-year repayment plan, you'd pay roughly $308 each month with about $121 of that payment going toward student loan interest.
Over your first year in repayment, you'd repay $3,691 overall: $2,293 in principal and $1,398 in interest. If you qualified for the student loan interest deduction, you could reduce your taxable income by the portion that went toward interest.
This includes not just newly accrued interest — like that $1,398 — but also any money that pays off interest that was capitalized, or added to your balance, when you entered repayment.
If you're still in school or paying for education expenses, the government offers other education tax credits:
American Opportunity Credit allows you to lower your tax bill by up to $2,500 if you paid that much in undergraduate education expenses last year. Eligible expenses include tuition, mandatory school fees and books and supplies.
Lifetime Learning Credit can reduce your tax bill by up to $2,000 if you're pursuing an undergraduate, graduate, vocational or non-degree program. There is no limit to the number of tax years in which you can claim this credit.
You can claim these benefits even if you paid for expenses with student loans. Your income and other factors can help you determine which will save you the most. As with the student loan interest deduction, you must file your taxes jointly if you're married to be eligible for these tax breaks.