 So now, if I pulled it up, if I made my income go up to like, let's say like 80,000, and I bring it on back over, now it's limiting the deduction that I have here. So if I go to my schedule one, you can check out that on the worksheet. So you can see what the phase out starts to be applied is, I won't go through the calculation. Obviously, you don't typically explain all the calculations to a client, the software can help you to understand and make sure that the calculations are properly being calculated, but the general idea is that, yeah, you're gonna get the student loan interest if your income is below a certain threshold, but then it starts to phase out as your income gets above a certain threshold, and then it caps out at like 85,000 or so where you don't get any benefit at all. And so if I bring it up to 85,000, then it has been eliminated. Okay, so then we can also let's say if we had a married couple. So now Mr. Anderson got married to Jane Anderson now. So 85,000, and now we've got the 2,500 has been applied again, because if I go back to the schedule one and page two, we've got the 2,500 because the threshold is up to, you don't lose it all completely until you get to like 175,000. So if I brought the income, if I said, for example, wages and added a W-2, number two, W-2 for the spouse. And I said we had another, we had another let's say 50,000, that's gonna let's say 60,000 and I pull that on over. So we're still at the 2,500, so it's still capping it out at the 2,500. Let's say we brought this up to 70,000 for a total of 255. So now it's starting to reduce it. Now 2,500 is being reduced. And then if I bring it up, you can just see the kind of the curve here as we adjust it. If I bring it up to 80,000 for a 165 total, then we're at the 832. And then if I bring it up to something close to 175, which is gonna be 80, 90,000, then I think it's gonna be eliminated. So there it is. So you get the general sense of it on the married side of things. Obviously the phase out thresholds typically being higher for married versus single.