Table of Contents
- Specific Instructions
- Statements to Recipients
- Payer's Name and Federal Identification Number
- Recipient's Name and Social Security Number (SSN)
- Account Number
- Box 1. Gross Distribution
- Box 2. Earnings
- Box 3. Basis
- Box 4. Trustee-to-Trustee Transfer Checkbox
- Box 5. Checkbox
- Box 6. Designated Beneficiary Checkbox
- Distribution Codes
FileForm 1099-Q, Payments From Qualified Education Programs (Under Sections 529 and 530), if you (a) are an officer or an employee, or the designee of an officer or employee, having control of a program established by a state or eligible educational institution; and (b) made a distribution from a qualified tuition program (QTP). A trustee of a Coverdell education savings account (ESA) must file Form 1099-Q to report distributions made from Coverdell ESAs.
Do not file Form 1099-Q for a change in the name of the designated beneficiary on a QTP account if the new beneficiary is a member of the former beneficiary's family. For a Coverdell ESA, the new beneficiary must be a member of the designated beneficiary's family and be under age 30 (except beneficiaries with special needs).
Family members of the designated beneficiary include the beneficiary's spouse. Also included are the beneficiary's children, stepchildren, foster children, and their descendants; siblings and their children; parents, their siblings, and ancestors; stepparents; in-laws; the spouse of any of the foregoing; and any first cousin of the designated beneficiary.
If you are required to file Form 1099-Q, you also must provide a statement to the recipient. Furnish a copy of Form 1099-Q or an acceptable substitute statement to each recipient. Seepart M in the 2013 General Instructions for Certain Information Returns.
The account number is required if you have multiple accounts for a recipient for whom you are filing more than one Form 1099-Q. Additionally, the IRS encourages you to designate an account number for all Forms 1099-Q that you file. Seepart L in the 2013 General Instructions for Certain Information Returns.
Gross distributions from a QTP, whether in cash or in-kind, include amounts for tuition credits or certificates, payment vouchers, tuition waivers, or other similar items. Gross distributions also include a refund to the account owner or the designated beneficiary, or to the beneficiary upon death or disability. For more information on reporting distributions, seeProposed Regulations section 1.529-4.
Gross distributions from a Coverdell ESA include amounts for a refund, a payment upon death or disability, or a withdrawal of excess contributions plus earnings.

To determine the earnings or (loss) on the gross distribution reported in box 1, use the earnings ratio described inProposed Regulations section 1.529-3 andNotice 2001-81. You can find Notice 2001-81 on page 617 of Internal Revenue Bulletin 2001-52 at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-irbs/irb01-52.pdf.
Enter the earnings in box 2. If there is a loss and this is not the final year for distributions from the account or there are no earnings, enter zero in box 2. Enter a loss in box 2 only if this is the final year for distributions from the account. Earnings are not subject to backup withholding.
If you are reporting a distribution from a Coverdell ESA that includes a returned contribution plus earnings, you should file two Forms 1099-Q, one to report the returned contribution plus earnings, the other to report the distribution of the other part of the account.
You should file a separate Form 1099-Q for any trustee-to-trustee transfer.
For Coverdell ESAs, if you are not reporting earnings, see the Caution on page 1.


For QTPs and Coverdell ESAs, if you can determine basis, enter in box 3 the basis included in the gross distribution reported in box 1. The amount in box 3 must equal box 1 minus box 2.

Check this box if the distribution was made directly (trustee-to-trustee transfer) from one QTP to another. For a Coverdell ESA, check this box if the distribution was made directly to another Coverdell ESA or to a QTP.
In a trustee-to-trustee transfer between qualified education programs, the distributing program must provide you with a statement reporting the earnings portion of the distribution within 30 days of the distribution or by January 10th, whichever is earlier. You must properly account for this in computing the earnings or (loss) reported in box 2 and the basis reported in box 3.

Check the “Private” box if the distribution is from a QTP established by one or more private eligible educational institutions or check the “State” box if the distribution is from a QTP established by a state. Otherwise, check the “Coverdell ESA” box.
Check the box if the recipient is not the designated beneficiary under a qualified tuition program or a Coverdell ESA (see section 529(e)(1)).
For 2013, you may, but are not required to, include one of the following distribution codes in the blank box below boxes 5 and 6. You may abbreviate as needed. For example, for distribution code 1, you may enter “distr. code 1.”
| Distribution Code | Use this code for... |
|---|---|
| 1–Distributions | Distributions (including transfers) to the recipient and any direct payments to a qualified educational facility. However, use code 2 or 3 for withdrawals of excess contributions. |
| 2–Excess contributions plus earnings taxable in 2013 | Withdrawals of excess Coverdell ESA contributions and earnings unless code 3 applies. |
| 3–Excess contributions plus earnings taxable in 2012 | Withdrawals of excess contributions from a Coverdell ESA. Advise payees, at the time the distribution is made, that the earnings are taxable in the year in which the excess contributions were made. |
| 4–Disability | Distributions you made after the recipient was disabled (see section 72(m)(7)). |
| 5–Death | Payments to a decedent's beneficiary, including an estate. |
| 6–Prohibited transaction | Prohibited transactions. See sections 408(e)(2) and 408(e)(4) for similar rules that apply to a Coverdell ESA. |
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