Always use the generic tag qt. You can think of this as a "master" tag. This solves the realistic problem, ensuring that Qt experts get eyes on your question.
And since Qt is a framework, you should probably also add a language tag, if for no other reason than to indicate what language you'd prefer to receive code samples in.
Only use the version-specific tag if your issue is known or believed to be version-specific. Do not throw a version-specific tag on your question just because you are using that particular version. Place this information in words in your question instead.
When choosing a version-specific tag, pick the most descriptive (specific?) one that you can. So if the problem is specific to version 4.8, use qt4.8, but if it afflicts Qt 4.x, then use qt4. You can use both qt4 and qt4.8 if you want and you have the room.
Version-specific tags are also useful when you are limited to using a particular (older) version of a language or framework, and want answerers to take that into account. So, for example, if Qt 5 is out and might have a better way of solving the problem, tag your question qt4 if you cannot upgrade to Qt 5 and want to see solutions that will work on Qt 4. (This is especially common in the C++ world, where you need to explicitly tag a question c++03 if you don't want to see C++11- or C++17-based solutions.)
Generally speaking (I am not a Qt expert), a version point-x tag seems way too specific to be useful. Unless that point-x version introduced a bunch of breaking changes or was especially buggy (yet popular), there is just no need for a minor-version tag. The major version tag is sufficient.