Is ACT® Tutoring Tax Deductible?
Read time: 5 min · Last updated: June 20, 2026
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Tax laws change and individual circumstances vary. Consult a qualified tax professional before making any decisions based on this information.
The short answer for most families: no, ACT® tutoring is not directly tax deductible as a personal expense under federal tax law. Private tutoring for standardized tests is considered a personal education expense, and personal education expenses for K–12 students generally don't qualify for federal income tax deductions.
That being said, there are a few legitimate ways families can reduce the after-tax cost of test prep.
529 Plans
A 529 college savings plan is the most commonly overlooked option. Federal law allows 529 funds to be used for qualified K–12 education expenses up to $10,000 per year, though the definition of “qualified” has been a moving target and varies by state. CA is the big one that still charges 2.5% tax rate for withdrawals.
Whether ACT® tutoring qualifies under your state's 529 rules depends on how your state defines eligible K–12 expenses. Some states take a broad interpretation; others are restrictive. If you have a 529 with unused funds, this is worth checking with your plan administrator or a tax advisor — using pre-tax savings for tutoring effectively reduces the real cost.
Coverdell Education Savings Accounts
A Coverdell ESA allows tax-free withdrawals for “qualified education expenses” at elementary and secondary schools. The IRS definition of qualified expenses for K–12 includes tutoring — but specifically tutoring “required or provided by the school.” Whether privately arranged ACT® tutoring meets this standard is ambiguous and depends on interpretation.
I couldn't find anything good online about whether tutoring could fit the bill for being a “qualified expense” so if anyone out there asks their financial planner, please report back. I will update this and preserve your anonymity.
Coverdell accounts have low contribution limits ($2,000 per year per beneficiary) and are less commonly used than 529s, but if your family has one, the same question applies: consult your tax advisor about whether test prep tutoring qualifies.
Business Expense (Limited Circumstances)
In narrow circumstances — for example, if a parent operates a business and employs their child — certain education expenses might be structured as a business deduction. This is highly fact-specific and the IRS scrutinizes these arrangements closely. It is not a general solution and requires professional tax advice to execute correctly.
State-Level Deductions
A small number of states offer their own education-related tax deductions or credits that are broader than federal law. These vary widely. If you're in a state with an education tax credit or deduction, it's worth checking whether test prep expenses qualify under that state's specific rules.
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Minnesota are some examples.
The Practical Takeaway
For most families paying out of pocket for ACT® tutoring, there is no straightforward federal tax deduction available.
If you have a 529 with available funds, checking whether your state allows test prep as a qualified expense is worth the ten-minute phone call to your plan administrator. That's the highest-probability path to a real tax benefit for most families who have such a plan.
For everything else, consult a tax professional — not a tutoring website. If cost is the real barrier rather than the tax treatment, it's worth knowing how ACT prep stacks up on a budget, and that I take on a small number of scholarship students each year.