Tax Deduction vs. Tax Credit

When you give to support K–12 scholarships, not all tax incentives are created equal — and knowing the difference can help make your gift go further.

What a Tax Deduction Does

tax deduction lowers the amount of your income that’s subject to tax.


So if you donate $1,000 and you’re in a 24% tax bracket, that gift might reduce your tax bill by roughly $240. It’s helpful — but the value depends on your tax rate and whether you itemize your deductions. 


What a Tax Credit Does

tax credit is way more powerful: it reduces your tax bill dollar for dollar.


So a $1,000 tax credit knocks $1,000 off the taxes you owe. Simple, straightforward, predictable — and often worth much more than a deduction. 


Why This Matters for Education Giving

Under the new Education Freedom Tax Credit (effective 2027):

Donors can receive a federal tax credit up to $1,700 for contributions to eligible Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs).

That means money you would have sent to the IRS can instead directly fund scholarships for K–12 students.

Unlike a deduction — which just affects taxable income — this credit shrinks your actual tax bill one-for-one. 


The Bottom Line for Donors

If you care about maximizing your financial impact while supporting education choice, a tax credit trumps a tax deduction — period. You’re not just giving — you’re strategically directing dollars that benefit students and your own tax situation in a more efficient way.