Education Freedom Tax Credit: Who Qualifies and When

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Key Points

  • The Education Freedom Tax Credit will allow taxpayers to reduce up to $1,700 in federal income taxes to fund scholarships for K–12 students, starting in 2027.
  • Scholarships funded through the credit can be used for a wide range of education expenses, including private school tuition, tutoring, and services for students with disabilities.
  • The program is voluntary for states, and access for families will depend heavily on where they live and how their state implements the system.

The U.S. Departments of Education and Treasury released new details on the Education Freedom Tax Credit, a centerpiece of President Trump’s Working Families Tax Cuts Act.

Administration officials describe it as the largest expansion of education choice to date, with the potential to steer billions of dollars toward private scholarships and education services outside traditional public school funding streams.

Unlike past education tax benefits aimed directly at families, this credit works by encouraging taxpayers to contribute to nonprofit Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs), which then distribute aid to eligible students.

The design is complex and a bit confusing, the rollout will take time, and its impact will vary sharply by state. For families, the key question is not whether the credit exists, but whether and how it will be available where they live.

An infographic displaying the three step process required to navigate the education freedom tax credit. Source: The College Investor

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How The Education Freedom Tax Credit Works

At its core, the Education Freedom Tax Credit allows individuals to claim a federal tax credit of up to $1,700 for cash contributions made to approved Scholarship Granting Organizations, or SGOs. A tax credit reduces federal income tax liability dollar for dollar, making it more valuable than a tax deduction that only lowers taxable income.

These SGOs are nonprofit organizations that must use at least 90% of their funds for K–12 education scholarships. Those scholarships can be applied to a broad set of education expenses tied to public, private, or charter schools. Examples include private school tuition, tutoring services, classroom supplies, career training equipment, and support services for students with disabilities.

The program is structured as a three-step pipeline: states opt in, taxpayers contribute, and students receive scholarships. States that choose to participate must formally elect to become “covered states” and publish an annual list of qualifying SGOs. Taxpayers then donate to one of those organizations and claim the credit when they file their federal tax return.

If a taxpayer cannot use the full $1,700 credit in a single year, any unused portion can be carried forward for up to five years. Any U.S. citizen or resident can claim the tax credit if they make a qualifying cash contribution to a listed SGO in a participating state. There are no income limits for donors.

Who Can Receive The Scholarship?

To receive the scholarship, students must meet income and enrollment criteria. Eligible students must be eligible to enroll in a public elementary or secondary school and come from households earning no more than 300% of the area’s median gross income. That threshold is relatively high in many regions, meaning most middle-income families in participating states could qualify.

Scholarship amounts themselves are not capped at $1,700. While donors are limited to that credit amount, SGOs can pool funds and award larger scholarships based on their mission and the needs of students they serve.

Which States Are Participating?

The administration says that, as of the most recent announcement, 23 states have opted in to the Education Freedom Tax Credit, including:

  • Alabama
  • Alaska
  • Arkansas
  • Georgia
  • Idaho
  • Indiana
  • Iowa
  • Louisiana
  • Mississippi
  • Missouri
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • Nevada
  • North Dakota
  • Ohio
  • Oklahoma
  • South Carolina
  • South Dakota
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Virginia
  • West Virginia
  • Wyoming

Sadly, state participation is voluntary and uneven, and families will not have access to scholarships unless their state completes the opt-in process and approves SGOs.

Taxpayers will not be able to claim the credit until they file returns for contributions made on or after January 1, 2027. Treasury and the IRS are still drafting implementing rules, following a request for public comment issued in December 2025.

What This Means For Families

For families in participating states, the program could expand access to education services that have historically been out of reach. Administration estimates suggest the credit could generate as much as $24 billion in education funding annually if widely used, with every $1 billion in scholarships potentially supporting tuition for roughly 77,000 students or tutoring for more than 300,000 students.

How that translates to real help will depend on local conditions. In states with existing waitlists for tutoring or scholarship programs, SGO funding could reduce backlogs. In others, scholarships may primarily flow to private school tuition or enrichment services.

The flexibility of allowable expenses means families could tailor support to their child’s needs, whether that means after-school tutoring, specialized disability services, or career-focused programs at the high school level. The administration emphasizes that scholarships can supplement public education rather than replace it, particularly for students who remain enrolled in public schools but need additional services.

What Comes Next

The Education Freedom Tax Credit is not immediate relief. Families and donors will need to wait until 2027 to begin making qualifying contributions, and states must complete administrative steps well before then to ensure SGOs are approved.

For now, the most important actions are informational. Families can monitor whether their state opts in, track which SGOs are approved, and assess whether their household income falls within eligibility limits. Taxpayers interested in claiming the credit will need to plan charitable contributions strategically once IRS guidance is finalized.

The Treasury Department has said additional rules and instructions for taxpayers, charities, and states will be issued this year. 

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The post Education Freedom Tax Credit: Who Qualifies and When appeared first on The College Investor.

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