No. Student loans are borrowed money, and is not considered "income;" therefore, you do not include them on your taxes.
No, that is getting a loan with a loan. If anything it will count against your credit worthiness.
Yes, I believe it would count as income in the period in which it was given. So, technically, it could make the client ineligible and they may want to delay their application.
yes and no but mainly no
If you can not prove to the loan officer that you have a stable source of income don't count on getting the loan.
not always, in most cases whoever makes the most income is the primary borrower on the loan and the co-borrower is usually there for extra income and not their credit score.
Yes, a parent's income does count when a 17-year-old is applying for financial aid for students. The Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) requires information about the parent's income and financial situation to determine the student's eligibility for federal student aid.
Because it is a part of the family support that helps pay some of the necessary living expenses.
In the U.S., your federal income tax refund does not count as taxable income for the next year. If you receive a refund from your state, and you itemized your deductions on the federal return, then the state refund will count as income on your federal return. (If you didn't itemize, then your state refund won't count as income.)
No, only that money which you earn or interest from investments count as income and it is only income that is taxed, not money that you borrow.
Yes, as it replaces earnings.
If the student is under 24 at the end of the year or is totally and permanently disabled, there is no limit. But the student must not provide more than half of his/her own support. Money deposited in a savings account (for example) does not count as support. Otherwise, the student's gross income cannot exceed $3500 and the taxpayer claiming the student on their return must provide at least half of the student's support.
FAFSA has five types of federal loans available; most have income requirements, but not all. The loans that have income requirements are the Federal Perkins Loan and Subsidized Stafford Loans. The loans that do not have income requirements are PLUS loans (parents, or graduate and professional student), unsubsidized Stafford Loans, and consolidation loans. If a student is a dependent of their parents, the parents income will count towards meeting income requirements. Loans that are not income dependent do require good credit. http://studentaid.ed.gov/PORTALSWebApp/students/english/index.jsp
For federal income tax purposes, some sellers/buyers ("broker/dealers") report purchases and sales of real estate as ordinary income, not capital gains. The theory is that you're not "just" an investor; your ordinary business is buying and selling real estate like any other commodity. Builders fall into that category in particular.
It depends if you claim yourself for taxes or not. You should chech with your guidance counseler.
does rental income count against ss income limits
No, that is getting a loan with a loan. If anything it will count against your credit worthiness.
Most definitely for almost any loan. If it is a student loan, you can count on it.