Submitted by happyharrr t3_zp40ae in Maine
Edit 12/28: New summary and frequently asked questions from MRS.
Maine is offering a new refundable tax credit starting this tax year called the Student Loan Repayment Tax Credit (SLRTC). It is replacing the Educational Opportunity Tax Credit. There were some news articles about this and it came up again more recently around when Biden announced his forgiveness plan.
Maine Revenue Services (MRS) provides a short summary of this program on page 6 and you can read the Maine Legislature SLRTC statute in full for more details. Outside of these two links, there is not much reliable information about this new tax credit.
In short, Mainers who obtained an associate, bachelor's, or graduate degree from an accredited community college, college, or university after December 31, 2007 can now apply for a refundable tax credit of up to $2,500 per year for eligible student loan payments up to a $25,000 lifetime cap.
Unfortunately MRS has not updated their website yet with information about the new SLRTC, but the website says that additional information on the SLRTC will be available soon (for the record, the website has said this since July).
There are still some things that I am not 100% clear on. Is this a dollar-for-dollar repayment match? Is a single lump sum payment acceptable? Do payments made during the federal pause still count? I assume yes to all, but I'm not certain. I'm hoping MRS will clarify some of these things once they update their website.
I know payments for most loans are still paused, but it might be worth considering for some of you. Based on what I know, I plan on making a loan payment in the next week in hopes that I will qualify for this. Anyone else planning on utilizing this tax credit?
snackexchanger t1_j0r1gnr wrote
This is the first that I am hearing that the program is changing/being replaced. First I got screwed by the loan forgiveness because I refinanced my loans in February 2020.
Now the state credit is being cut roughly in half from a max of $4,500 down to $2,500? That’s quite a drop…
Now people who are above the $2,500 limit need to decide whether to take the financial hit in already tough economic times, especially for young people (which is the exact opposite of what they claim to be doing with this credit) or refinance their loans over a longer period, saving them money in the long run but keeping them in debt longer.
If you couldn’t tell I am not a fan of this change