HR-4507-119
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Sponsored by Jennifer Kiggans (R-VA)
What it does
This bill would create a temporary federal tax credit for licensed preschool, elementary, and secondary school teachers who provide at least 150 hours of after-school tutoring per year in math, reading/writing, or science to students at the same school level where they are employed. The base credit would be $500, with a supplemental amount of up to an additional $500 for teachers who provide more than 150 hours, scaling proportionally up to 200 hours. The credit would apply to tax years beginning after December 31, 2025, and would expire after December 31, 2032. The Treasury Secretary would be required to submit annual reports to Congress on credit usage, tutoring hours, and geographic distribution.
Who benefits
Eligible teachers who provide qualifying tutoring — primarily those already inclined to tutor who would receive a financial offset of up to $1,000 per couple filing jointly. Students who receive tutoring, particularly those in under-resourced schools where teachers may be more motivated to tutor with a financial incentive. Married couples where both spouses are eligible teachers, who could claim up to $1,000 combined. School districts and communities that benefit from increased academic support outside school hours. Researchers and policymakers who would gain data from the required annual Treasury reports on tutoring patterns and geographic distribution.
Who is hurt
Teachers who tutor but fall below the 150-hour threshold would receive no credit, potentially disadvantaging part-time or occasional tutors. Private tutoring companies and independent tutors who compete with teacher-provided tutoring may face a market disadvantage, as the credit subsidizes only credentialed school employees. Teachers in states with non-standard certification structures may face eligibility uncertainty. Federal taxpayers broadly would bear the revenue cost of the credit. Teachers who tutor students at a different school level than their employment (e.g., a high school teacher tutoring middle schoolers) would be ineligible.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the COVID-19 pandemic produced well-documented learning loss — the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) showed the largest declines in math and reading scores in decades — and that high-dosage tutoring by credentialed teachers is among the most evidence-backed interventions for accelerating recovery. They contend that teachers who volunteer their off-hours time to tutor bear a real personal cost, and that a modest tax credit of up to $1,000 per couple provides meaningful recognition and financial incentive to expand this practice. The built-in sunset and annual reporting requirement also allow Congress to evaluate effectiveness before deciding whether to extend the program.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the credit's 150-hour minimum threshold — roughly three hours per week throughout the school year — is a high bar that may exclude many willing teachers, limiting the program's reach and concentrating benefits among those already most committed to tutoring. They contend that a non-refundable tax credit disproportionately benefits higher-earning teachers who owe sufficient federal income tax to use it, while providing little or no benefit to lower-income teachers who may need the incentive most. Critics may also argue that the $500–$1,000 credit is too modest to meaningfully change teacher behavior, and that direct grants or school-based funding would more efficiently expand tutoring access.