Policy Memo

Scholarship Tax Credit

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Published

April 11, 2026

Author

Preston Brashers

Topline

The One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) allows a $1,700 tax credit for contributions individuals make to (nonprofit) scholarship granting organizations (SGOs) that help fund K-12 educational expenses.

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Author: Preston Brashers

TOPLINE:

The One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) allows a $1,700 tax credit for contributions individuals make to (nonprofit) scholarship granting organizations (SGOs) that help fund K-12 educational expenses.

BACKGROUND:

[if gte mso 9]> Normal 0 false false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE Total spending on public K-12 education is approaching $1 trillion per year. Most of that funding comes from state and local governments and is reflected in higher property taxes across the United States. Most public schools aren’t starving for resources. Census estimated that nationwide, public school funding averaged nearly $16,000 per pupil, as of 2022. According to Pew estimates, the federal government covers about 13.6% of the cost of K-12 education nationally, including programs like school lunch and breakfast. However, the federal government has used those funds to exert outsized influence on local public-school curricula. Educational outcomes, like reading test scores of public school students have dropped considerably in the past decade, while homeschooled students and students in private schools have overachieved. This has helped spark the school choice movement.

How the Scholarship Tax Credit Works:

Why It Matters?

Where Can I Find Changes?

OBBB Section 70411; 26 U.S.C. § 25F.

BOTTOMLINE:

Many public schools are broken but throwing federal money at private K-12 options risks breaking the educational options that have been working best.

This memo is part of the One Big Beautiful Booklet, a collection of more than 60 memos that examine and summarize the major aspects of the One Big Beautiful Bill – the signature legislative achievement of President Trump and the 119th Congress.

more ob3-60 memos