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| Special education as a
medical expense. |
From The Tax Adviser:
Dyslexia
Program Tuition Is a Valid Deduction
n letter ruling 200521003, the IRS held that
tuition paid to a school program to help dyslexic
children deal with their condition was an IRC section
213(a) deductible medical expense. The ruling
broadensalbeit slightlythe definition of the
kinds of payments that qualify as deductible medical
costs. CPAs, however, should be aware of the
rulings inherent limits and be prepared to address
the other restrictions on the medical deduction.
OVERVIEW
In the ruling, the
taxpayers two children were diagnosed with
disabilities caused by medical conditions (including
dyslexia) that handicapped their ability to learn. The
taxpayers enrolled the children in a school that provided
them with special education designed to enable them to
cope.
HOLDING
AND ANALYSIS
The IRS first explained
that normal education is not medical care,
because it is not designed to overcome a medical
disability. For education to be considered medical care,
a physician or other qualified professional must diagnose
a medical condition that requires special education to
correct it. Although a school need not hire doctors, it
must have professional staff competent to design and
supervise a curriculum providing such care. Overcoming
the disability must be a primary reason for the
childs attending the school; any ordinary education
received must be incidental to that.
The IRS ruled that the children were
attending the school principally to receive medical care
in the form of special education in the years they were
diagnosed as having a medical condition that hindered
their ability to learn. Thus, the taxpayers can deduct
tuition as a section 213(a) medical expense for the years
the children continue to be diagnosed as medically
handicapped. Citing revenue ruling 69-607, the IRS
further held that dyslexia could be sufficiently severe
as to be such a handicap.
This ruling expands the types of
tuition payments that may be deductible as medical
expenses. It refutes the presumption that educational
institutions must be special schools for
their tuition to be deductible. It confirms that tuition
for programs designed to enable dependents to deal with a
diagnosed medical handicapsuch as
dyslexiaqualifies as a medical deduction, as long
as other requirements are met.
LIMITS
Before taxpayers claim
tuition as a deduction, however, there are other
requirements in letter ruling 200521003:
Medical care must be a principal
purpose for attending the institution.
The institutions program must
be designed and administered by qualified professionals
for the purposes of treating the dependents medical
condition.
Ordinary education must be
incidental.
Further, medical expenses are
deductible only to the extent they exceed 7.5% of the
taxpayers adjusted gross income. Finally, letter
rulings apply only to the taxpayer who obtained the
ruling; they are not precedential. However, they do show
the services thinking on a particular issue.
For more information, see the Tax
Clinic, edited by Joel Ackerman, in the October 2005
issue of The Tax Adviser.
Lesli S.
Laffie, editor
The Tax Adviser
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