Built to help voters quickly verify how officials vote — district first, party second. All information is sourced from official public records.
HR. 939 · 119th Congress

Student Empowerment Act

In committee

This bill has not become law. Status shown reflects the latest official action.

See what this could mean for your district

Save your district in Account to view district-specific context for this bill.

Bill details

Introduced: 2/4/2025
Status: Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Bill ID: 119hr939
Latest action: Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

Summary

Introduced in House

Student Empowerment Act This bill expands the education-related expenses that may be paid for with tax-free distributions from a qualified tuition program (also known as a 529 plan) to include certain expenses related to elementary, secondary, and homeschool education. Under current law, distributions from a 529 plan are excluded from gross income if they are used to pay for qualified higher education expenses, which includes up to $10,000 (per year and per beneficiary) for tuition at an elementary or secondary public, private, or religious school. The bill expands the education-related expenses that may be paid for with tax-free distributions from a 529 plan to include tuition related to homeschooling and the following expenses related to elementary, secondary, and homeschool education: • curriculum and curricular materials, • books or other instructional materials, • online educational materials, • tutoring or educational classes outside the home, • testing fees, • fees for dual enrollment in an institution of higher education, and • educational therapies for students with disabilities.

Source: BILLSUM · Summary date: 2/4/2025

District impact notes

0 notes

No impact notes have been generated for this bill yet.

These impact notes are AI-generated from official bill metadata/summary as a prototype feature — not official government language.

Tip: impacts are typically generated by the scheduled workflow. If you just ran it, refresh in a minute.

Related votes

Roll calls that reference this bill in official data.

0 roll calls
No related roll calls found yet for this bill.

Primary sources

Official links to verify details. (No interpretation.)

Summary source label: BILLSUM
About this data
  • OurCongress is non-partisan by design. We do not add political interpretation or advocacy.
  • Bill data and official summaries come from GovInfo and Congress.gov. Some bills do not have published summaries yet.
  • District impact notes (when shown) are AI-generated from official bill metadata/summaries to improve readability. They are not official government language.
  • This page updates automatically via a daily ingestion pipeline.

About this data

Non-partisan by design
OurCongress provides plain-English context without endorsements, political interpretation, or advocacy.
Official sources
Data is sourced from official government records (e.g., Congress.gov, GovInfo, Clerk of the House, and the U.S. Senate).
AI-generated text
Some sections may be AI-generated from official summaries/metadata to help readability. AI output can be imperfect—verify with primary sources.
Last updated: 2/4/2025Source: BILLSUMBill: 119hr939Learn more →