Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school is a luxury. You don't get tax breaks for luxuries.
Companies write off vacations all the time and call them board meetings
Anonymous wrote:You can deduct your annual giving contributions and your auction donations. But of course that's on top of tuition. For a while schools were trying to frame annual giving as the tax deductible portion of tuition (and suggest that families aim to cover the "gap"), but that concept ran afoul of the IRS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope not.
Why not? It doesn't seem fair to pay taxes for school and pay for private school.
Tough shit. Private school is a choice for a privileged few. Quit your entitled whining. It's embarrassing.
Says the person who writes off 3 martini lunches.
Anonymous wrote:Private school is a luxury. You don't get tax breaks for luxuries.
Anonymous wrote:Private school is a luxury. You don't get tax breaks for luxuries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope not.
Why not? It doesn't seem fair to pay taxes for school and pay for private school.
Tough shit. Private school is a choice for a privileged few. Quit your entitled whining. It's embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope not.
Why not? It doesn't seem fair to pay taxes for school and pay for private school.
Anonymous wrote:Why can you deduct college tuition and not k-12? I don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope not.
Why not? It doesn't seem fair to pay taxes for school and pay for private school.
Yeah, it does. Private school isn't a public good. We give tax breaks for things that contribute to the public good. Private schools actually do the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope not.
Why not? It doesn't seem fair to pay taxes for school and pay for private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope not.
Why not? It doesn't seem fair to pay taxes for school and pay for private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can deduct your annual giving contributions and your auction donations. But of course that's on top of tuition. For a while schools were trying to frame annual giving as the tax deductible portion of tuition (and suggest that families aim to cover the "gap"), but that concept ran afoul of the IRS.
Sounds unfair that the IRS would meddle with this.