[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.170A-2]

[Page 45-48]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.170A-2  Amounts paid to maintain certain students as members of 
the taxpayer's household.

    (a) In general. (1) The term charitable contributions includes 
amounts paid by the taxpayer during the taxable year to maintain certain 
students as members of his household which, under the provisions of 
section 170(h) and this section, are treated as amounts paid for the use 
of an organization described in section 170(c) (2), (3), or (4), and 
such amounts, to the extent they do not exceed the limitations under 
section 170(h)(2) and paragraph (b) of this section, are contributions 
deductible under section 170. In order for such amounts to be so 
treated, the student must be an individual who is neither a dependent 
(as defined in section 152) of the taxpayer nor related to the taxpayer 
in a manner described in any of the paragraphs (1) through (8) of 
section 152(a), and such individual must be a member of the taxpayer's 
household pursuant to a written agreement between the taxpayer and an 
organization described in section 170(c) (2), (3), or (4) to implement a 
program of the organization to provide educational opportunities for 
pupils or students placed in private homes by such organization. 
Furthermore, such amounts must be paid to maintain such individual 
during the period in the taxable

[[Page 46]]

year he is a member of the taxpayer's household and is a full-time pupil 
or student in the 12th or any lower grade at an educational institution, 
as defined in section 151(e)(4) and Sec. 1.151-3, located in the United 
States. Amounts paid outside of such period, but within the taxable 
year, for expenses necessary for the maintenance of the student during 
the period will qualify for the charitable contributions deduction if 
the other limitation requirements of the section are met.
    (2) For purposes of subparagraph (1) of this paragraph, amounts 
treated as charitable contributions include only those amounts actually 
paid by the taxpayer during the taxable year which are directly 
attributable to the maintenance of the student while he is a member of 
the taxpayer's household and is attending an educational institution on 
a full-time basis. This would include amounts paid to insure the well-
being of the individual and to carry out the purpose for which the 
individual was placed in the taxpayer's home. For example, a deduction 
under section 170 would be allowed for amounts paid for books, tuition, 
food, clothing, transportation, medical and dental care, and recreation 
for the individual. Amounts treated as charitable contributions under 
this section do not include amounts which the taxpayer would have 
expended had the student not been in the household. They would not 
include, for example, amounts paid in connection with the taxpayer's 
home for taxes, insurance, interest on a mortgage, repairs, etc. 
Moreover, such amounts do not include any depreciation sustained by the 
taxpayer in maintaining such student or students in his household, nor 
do they include the value of any services rendered on behalf of such 
student or students by the taxpayer or any member of the taxpayer's 
household.
    (3) For purposes of section 170(h) and this section, an individual 
will be considered to be a full-time pupil or student at an educational 
institution only if he is enrolled for a course of study prescribed for 
a full-time student at such institution and is attending classes on a 
full-time basis. Nevertheless, such individual may be absent from school 
due to special circumstances and still be considered to be in full-time 
attendance. Periods during the regular school term when the school is 
closed for holidays, such as Christmas and Easter, and for periods 
between semesters are treated as periods during which the pupil or 
student is in full-time attendance at the school. Also, absences during 
the regular school term due to illness of such individual shall not 
prevent him from being considered as a full-time pupil or student. 
Similarly, absences from the taxpayer's household due to special 
circumstances will not disqualify the student as a member of the 
household. Summer vacations between regular school terms are not 
considered periods of school attendance.
    (4) When claiming a deduction for amounts described in section 
170(h) and this section, the taxpayer must submit with his return a copy 
of his agreement with the organization sponsoring the individual placed 
in the taxpayer's household, together with a summary of the various 
items for which amounts were paid to maintain such individual, and a 
statement as to the date the individual became a member of the household 
and the period of his full-time attendance at school and the name and 
location of such school. Substantiation of amounts claimed must be 
supported by adequate records of the amounts actually paid. Due to the 
nature of certain items, such as food, a record of amount spent for all 
members of the household, with an equal portion thereof allocated to 
each member, will be acceptable.
    (b) Limitations. Section 170(h) and this section shall apply to 
amounts paid during the taxable year only to the extent that the amounts 
paid in maintaining each pupil or student do not exceed $50 multiplied 
by the number of full calendar months in the taxable year that the pupil 
or student is maintained in accordance with the provisions of this 
section. For purposes of such limitation if 15 or more days of a 
calendar month fall within the period to which the maintenance of such 
pupil or student relates, such month is considered as a full calendar 
month. To the extent that such amounts qualify as charitable 
contributions under section 170(c), the aggregate of such

[[Page 47]]

amounts plus other contributions made during the taxable year for the 
use of an organization described in section 170(c) is deductible under 
section 170 subject to the limitation provided in section 170(b)(1)(B) 
and paragraph (c) of Sec. 1.170A-8.
    (c) Compensation or reimbursement. Amounts paid during the taxable 
year to maintain a pupil or student as a member of the taxpayer's 
household as provided in paragraph (a) of this section, shall not be 
taken into account under section 170(h) and this section, if the 
taxpayer receives any money or other property as compensation or 
reimbursement for any portion of such amounts. The taxpayer will not be 
denied the benefits of section 170(h) if he prepays an extraordinary or 
nonrecurring expense such as a hospital bill or vacation trip, at the 
request of the individual's parents or the sponsoring organization and 
is reimbursed for such prepayment. The value of services performed by 
the pupil or student in attending to ordinary chores of the household 
will generally not be considered to constitute compensation or 
reimbursement. However, if the pupil or student is taken into the 
taxpayer's household to replace a former employee of the taxpayer or 
gratuitously to perform substantial services for the taxpayer, the facts 
and circumstances may warrant a conclusion that the taxpayer received 
reimbursement for maintaining the pupil or student.
    (d) No other amount allowed as deduction. Except to the extent that 
amounts described in section 170(h) and this section are treated as 
charitable contributions under section 170(c) and, therefore, deductible 
under section 170(a), no deduction is allowed for any amount paid to 
maintain an individual, as a member of the taxpayer's household, in 
accordance with the provisions of section 170(h) and this section.
    (e) Illustrations. The application of this section may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. The X organization is an organization described in 
section 170(c)(2) and is engaged in a program under which a number of 
European children are placed in the homes of U.S. residents in order to 
further the children's high school education. In accordance with 
paragraph (a) of this section, the taxpayer, A, who reports his income 
on the calendar year basis, agreed with X to take two of the children, 
and they were placed in the taxpayer's home on January 2, 1970, where 
they remained until January 21, 1971, during which time they were fully 
maintained by the taxpayer. The children enrolled at the local high 
school for the full course of study prescribed for 10th grade students 
and attended the school on a full-time basis for the spring semester 
starting January 18, 1970, and ending June 3, 1970, and for the fall 
semester starting September 1, 1970, and ending January 13, 1971. The 
total cost of food paid by A in 1970 for himself, his wife, and the two 
children amounted to $1,920, or $40 per month for each member of the 
household. Since the children were actually full-time students for only 
8 1/2 months during 1970, the amount paid for food for each child during 
that period amounted to $340. Other amounts paid during the 8 1/2-month 
period for each child for laundry, lights, water, recreation, and school 
supplies amounted to $160. Thus, the amounts treated under section 
170(h) and this section as paid for the use of X would, with respect to 
each child, total $500 ($340+$160), or a total for both children of 
$1,000, subject to the limitations of paragraph (b) of this section. 
Since, for purposes of such limitations, the children were full-time 
students for only 8 full calendar months during 1970 (less than 15 days 
in January 1970), the taxpayer may treat only $800 as a charitable 
contribution made in 1970, that is, $50 multiplied by the 8 full 
calendar months, or $400 paid for the maintenance of each child. Neither 
the excess payments nor amounts paid to maintain the children during the 
period before school opened and for the period in summer between regular 
school terms is taken into account by reason of section 170(h). Also, 
because the children were full-time students for less than 15 days in 
January 1971 (although maintained in the taxpayer's household for 21 
days), amounts paid to maintain the children during 1971 would not 
qualify as a charitable contribution.
    Example 2. A religious organization described in section 170(c)(2) 
has a program for providing educational opportunities for children it 
places in private homes. In order to implement the program, the 
taxpayer, H, who resides with his wife, son, and daughter of high school 
age in a town in the United States, signs an agreement with the 
organization to maintain a girl sponsored by the organization as a 
member of his household while the child attends the local high school 
for the regular 1970-71 school year. The child is a full-time student at 
the school during the school year starting September 6, 1970, and ending 
June 6, 1971, and is a member of the taxpayer's household during that 
period. Although the taxpayer pays $200 during the school period falling 
in 1970, and $240 during the school period falling in 1971, to maintain

[[Page 48]]

the child, he cannot claim either amount as a charitable contribution 
because the child's parents, from time to time during the school year, 
send butter, eggs, meat, and vegetables to H to help defray the expenses 
of maintaining the child. This is considered property received as 
reimbursement under paragraph (c) of this section. Had her parents not 
contributed the food, the fact that the child, in addition to the normal 
chores she shared with the taxpayer's daughter, such as cleaning their 
own rooms and helping with the shopping and cooking, was responsible for 
the family laundry and for the heavy cleaning of the entire house while 
the taxpayer's daughter had no comparable responsibilities would also 
preclude a claim for a charitable contributions deduction. These 
substantial gratuitous services are considered property received as 
reimbursement under paragraph (c) of this section.
    Example 3. A taxpayer resides with his wife in a city in the eastern 
United States. He agrees, in writing, with a fraternal society described 
in section 170(c)(4) to accept a child selected by the society for 
maintenance by him as a member of his household during 1971 in order 
that the child may attend the local grammar school as a part of the 
society's program to provide elementary education for certain children 
selected by it. The taxpayer maintains the child, who has as his 
principal place of abode the home of the taxpayer, and is a member of 
the taxpayer's household, during the entire year 1971. The child is a 
full-time student at the local grammar school for 9 full calendar months 
during the year. Under the agreement, the society pays the taxpayer $30 
per month to help maintain the child. Since the $30 per month is 
considered as compensation or reimbursement to the taxpayer for some 
portion of the maintenance paid on behalf of the child, no amounts paid 
with respect to such maintenance can be treated as amounts paid in 
accordance with section 170(h). In the absence of the $30 per month 
payments, if the child qualifies as a dependent of the taxpayer under 
section 152(a)(9), that fact would also prevent the maintenance payments 
from being treated as charitable contributions paid for the use of the 
fraternal society.

    (f) Effective date. This section applies only to contributions paid 
in taxable years beginning after December 31, 1969.

[T.D. 7207, 37 FR 20774, Oct. 4, 1972]