What Counts as Household Income for K-12 Scholarship Eligibility? - AFC Scholarship Fund
What Counts as Household Income for K-12 Scholarship Eligibility? – AFC Scholarship Fund

What Counts as Household Income for K–12 Scholarship Eligibility?

Gross income. Net income. Whose paycheck counts. Understanding the income rules is the first step to knowing whether your family qualifies for a scholarship.

A family reviewing their household income to determine eligibility for a K-12 scholarship through the AFC Scholarship Fund.
Tommy Schultz
Tommy Schultz · CEO, American Federation for Children

Gross income. Net income. Whose paycheck counts. Understanding the income rules is the first step to knowing whether your family qualifies for a scholarship.

A family at home looking over financial documents to understand their household income for K-12 scholarship eligibility.

What Does “Household Income” Actually Mean?

For K–12 scholarship eligibility, household income is measured against 300% of the Area Median Income (AMI) for your household size in your region. If your family’s gross income falls at or below that threshold, your child may qualify for a scholarship from a qualifying SGO.

That 300% figure is higher than many families expect. A household of four in many parts of the country has an AMI threshold that would surprise you. The program is designed to serve working and middle-income families — not just those in poverty. Many families who assume they won’t qualify actually do.

The key word throughout this process is gross income. Not what you take home. Not what’s on your tax return after deductions. Your total earned income before anything is withheld or adjusted.

Gross Income vs. Net (Take-Home) Income

This is the most common source of confusion in the eligibility process — and the one that causes the most families to underestimate (or overestimate) their likelihood of qualifying.

Gross Income
What SGOs Use to Determine Eligibility
Total earnings before taxes or deductions
Includes wages, bonuses, rental income, and more
Example: A family earning $150,000/year in total wages
This is the number that determines whether your family qualifies
Net / Take-Home Pay
What Hits Your Bank Account
What remains after federal/state taxes, 401(k), and benefits
That same $150,000 family might take home ~$105,000
This is NOT what scholarship eligibility is based on
Many families earn more than they realize in gross terms

A family earning $150,000 in gross wages might take home closer to $105,000 after federal and state taxes, health insurance premiums, 401(k) contributions, and other payroll deductions. Scholarship eligibility is based on that $150,000 figure — not $105,000. That distinction matters, and it’s why gathering the right documentation is important before assuming your family doesn’t qualify.

“Household income for scholarship eligibility is based on what your family earns — not what you take home after taxes. Many families who assume they don’t qualify are surprised to find they do.”

A parent reviewing pay stubs and tax documents to calculate gross household income for a K-12 scholarship application.

Income That Counts Toward the Eligibility Threshold

When calculating household income for K–12 scholarship eligibility, the following sources are generally included:

Income That Counts Toward the Threshold
Wages, salary, tips, and bonuses — all compensation from employment before deductions
Self-employment income — freelance, contractor, gig work, and business income (generally gross, before expenses)
Investment income — dividends, capital gains distributions, and interest received
Rental income — money received from tenants or rental properties
Retirement distributions — withdrawals from traditional IRAs, 401(k)s, pensions, and annuities
Social Security benefits — retirement and disability payments received
Alimony and child support received — regular court-ordered payments coming into the household
Other regular income — unemployment benefits, workers’ compensation, and any other consistent income source

Income That Does NOT Count

Not everything that flows through your household finances counts as income for eligibility purposes. The following are generally excluded:

Income That Does NOT Count Toward the Threshold
Student loans and financial aid — borrowed money that must be repaid is not income
Gifts and inheritances — one-time transfers of money or property are generally not counted as household income
Needs-based government assistance — SNAP, TANF, Medicaid, housing assistance, and similar programs are typically excluded
Roth IRA contributions returned — because Roth contributions are made with after-tax dollars, qualified distributions are not counted as income

Whose Income Counts?

Household income is not just about one earner — it reflects the financial resources of everyone in the family unit living under the same roof. Here’s how that typically breaks down:

Whose Income Counts?
Two-parent household — both parents’ income is combined into a single household total, regardless of how finances are managed separately
Single-parent household — only the custodial parent’s income counts; a non-custodial parent’s income is generally not included (though child support received is)
Multi-generational household — if grandparents or other adults live in the home and contribute financially, their income may be counted depending on the SGO’s household definition

Documentation You’ll Need

When you apply for a K–12 scholarship, the SGO will verify your household income against the eligibility threshold. Having the right documents ready makes the process smooth. Here’s what to gather:

Documentation You’ll Typically Need
Most recent federal tax return (Form 1040) — the primary document for verifying household income
W-2 statements — from all employers for every working adult in the household
Recent pay stubs — helpful if household income has changed significantly since the last tax return was filed
1099 forms — for freelance, contractor, investment, or other non-wage income
Social Security benefit statements — SSA-1099 forms documenting benefits received
Pension and retirement account statements — documentation of distributions taken from retirement accounts

If your income has changed significantly in the current year — due to a job change, retirement, or major life event — recent pay stubs or a letter from an employer may supplement or replace prior-year tax documents.

How AFC Scholarship Fund Helps Families Navigate Eligibility

The AFC Scholarship Fund is a federally qualified scholarship granting organization (SGO) that distributes K–12 scholarships to eligible families. Those scholarships are funded by donor contributions made under the Education Freedom Tax Credit — a federal tax credit of up to $1,700 annually that donors claim when they give. The EFTC is the donor’s benefit; the scholarship is the student’s.

Families who receive scholarships go through an income verification process to confirm eligibility. Our team is here to walk you through exactly what counts, what documents you need, and whether your household qualifies — no guessing required.

Does Receiving a Scholarship Affect Your Other Tax Credits?

No. Receiving a K–12 scholarship for your child does not affect your eligibility for federal tax benefits. The scholarship goes to the student — it is not a tax credit for your family and has no bearing on what you claim on your federal return. That means families can benefit from a K–12 scholarship and continue to claim the Child Tax Credit, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and other federal benefits they qualify for.

To be clear on how these two things relate: the EFTC is a donor’s tax credit. When someone donates to a qualifying SGO like AFC Scholarship Fund, that donor claims a dollar-for-dollar federal tax credit of up to $1,700. The SGO then uses those funds to award scholarships to eligible families. Your family receives the scholarship; the donor receives the tax credit. They are completely separate benefits.

K–12 Scholarship
For the Student’s Family
Awarded by an SGO using EFTC donor funds, based on household income
Covers tuition at a private K–12 school of your choice
Based on 300% AMI income eligibility threshold
Not a tax credit — a direct scholarship to the student
Child Tax Credit
For Parents on Their Tax Return
Federal credit for parents of qualifying children under 17
Up to $2,000 per qualifying child
Not affected by receiving a K–12 scholarship
Claimed separately — these two benefits are fully stackable

What If My Income Fluctuates?

Income variability is common — especially for self-employed workers, seasonal employees, and families with investment or rental income. Scholarship applications typically use the most recent full tax year as the baseline, but many SGOs can accommodate families whose income has changed significantly since then.

If you had an unusually high-income year (a business sale, a large bonus, an inheritance) that pushed you above the threshold but your typical income is well below it, it’s worth contacting the AFC Scholarship Fund directly. Eligibility isn’t always as rigid as it might first appear, particularly for families whose income situation has materially changed.

Common Questions About Specific Income Types

401(k) and retirement contributions: Pre-tax 401(k) contributions reduce your taxable income on your tax return — but for K–12 scholarship eligibility, gross income (before that deduction) is what counts. Your full wages are included in the calculation.

Tax refunds: A federal or state tax refund is not new income — it’s a return of money you already earned and overpaid. Tax refunds do not count as household income for scholarship eligibility.

Home equity and property values: The value of your home or other property is not income. Unrealized appreciation, home equity, and asset values do not factor into your household income calculation. Only money actually received — earned or distributed — during the relevant period is counted.

The Bottom Line

For most families, the eligibility question comes down to one number: your total household gross income for the most recent full year. If that number falls at or below 300% of the AMI for your household size and region, your child may qualify for a K–12 scholarship funded through the EFTC — and the application process can confirm that definitively.

If you’re not sure whether you qualify, the best thing to do is apply or ask. The AFC Scholarship Fund team is available to help you work through the numbers before you submit a formal application.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Pre-tax retirement contributions like 401(k) deferrals reduce your taxable income but are still counted as part of your gross household income for K–12 scholarship eligibility. Eligibility is based on gross income — what you earn before deductions — not the income figure that appears on your tax return after adjustments.

If your income is close to the 300% AMI threshold, it’s worth applying anyway. Income guidelines are updated annually and vary by household size and state. Some SGOs also have flexibility in how they calculate income for edge cases. Contact the AFC Scholarship Fund directly to discuss your family’s specific situation.

For K–12 scholarship eligibility purposes, self-employment income is generally calculated before business deductions — similar to gross income. However, individual SGOs may vary in how they handle self-employment income. The AFC Scholarship Fund can help you understand exactly how your income will be calculated.

No. Home equity, property values, and unrealized asset appreciation are not income and do not count toward the household income calculation for scholarship eligibility. Income calculations focus on money received during the year — earnings, distributions, and recurring payments — not the value of assets you own.

Generally, the income of the custodial parent’s household is used for scholarship eligibility purposes. If the child lives with one parent the majority of the time, that parent’s household income is what matters. If custody is split, the SGO will typically clarify which household’s income applies. Check with the AFC Scholarship Fund for guidance specific to your arrangement.

Yes. K–12 scholarships from qualifying SGOs are awarded to students based on household income eligibility — they are not a tax credit or tax benefit to the receiving family. The Child Tax Credit is a separate federal benefit available to parents of qualifying children under 17 regardless of scholarship status. Receiving a scholarship does not affect your Child Tax Credit eligibility.

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Tommy Schultz, CEO of the American Federation for Children
About the Author

Tommy Schultz is the CEO of the American Federation for Children (AFC), the nation’s largest school choice advocacy organization dedicated to empowering families — especially lower-income families — with the freedom to choose the best K-12 education for their children.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax laws are subject to change. Please consult a qualified tax professional regarding your individual circumstances. The Education Freedom Tax Credit is effective January 1, 2027. Contribution limits and program details are subject to IRS guidance and final program rules.