19,99 €
Don't let money get in the way of your kids' best education 529 & Education Savings Plans For Dummies helps you sort through the vast amount of information about education savings accounts and choose the plans that are best for you and your family. A college or private K-12 education is generally parents' single largest expense for their children. 529 plans and 530 plans (Coverdell accounts) are relatively solid investment vehicles that can make saving for college much easier, providing tax advantages that other types of investments can't match. Education savings can be part of your overall wealth accumulation strategy, and this book can show you which plans are right for you, help you decide when to start saving, and guide you through determining how much to save per year in order to meet your goals--and help your kids meet theirs. * Learn about the different types of tax-sheltered and tax-advantaged ways to save for education * Create a saving and investment strategy that makes sense for your family * Demystify the 529 and 530 plan rules and maximize your tax advantage * Help set your kids on the path to success and to their college of choice This is the perfect Dummies guide for parents or family members who want to begin saving for a college or K-12 education and who may want to supplement their current savings with tax-sheltered, education-specific accounts, or tax-advantaged investment accounts that may be used for education funding.
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Seitenzahl: 738
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023
529 & Education Savings Plans For Dummies®, 2nd Edition
Published by: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030-5774, www.wiley.com
Copyright © 2023 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey
Media and software compilation copyright © 2023 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Published simultaneously in Canada
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Library of Congress Control Number: 2023932630
ISBN 978-1-394-16033-4 (pbk); ISBN 978-1-394-16035-8 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-394-16034-1 (ebk)
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Introduction
About This Book
Conventions Used in This Book
Foolish Assumptions
How This Book Is Organized
Part 1: Figuring Out the Cost of Education — and How to Pay It
Part 2: Piecing Together Section 529 Plans
Part 3: Uncovering Coverdell Accounts
Part 4: Filling In the Gaps: More Ways to Save for Education
Part 5: The Part of Tens
Icons Used in This Book
Beyond the Book
Where to Go from Here
Part 1: Figuring Out the Cost of Education — and How to Pay It
Chapter 1: Braving the New World of Education Savings
Doing the Numbers
Exploring Section 529 Plans
Checking Out Coverdell Accounts
But Wait! There’s More!
Maximizing Your Savings, Minimizing Your Tax
Chapter 2: Checking Out Education Costs
Dissecting the Total Bill
Looking into the Costs of Various Types of Schools
Going on to Graduate School
Pushing Forward to Professional Studies
Online and Low-residency Learning: The Wave of the Future
Chapter 3: Realizing All Your Resources
Identifying How Parents Can Contribute
Accepting Help from Family
Understanding the Tax on Gifts
Seeking Out Student Sources
Chapter 4: Sharpening Your Savings Techniques
Focusing on the Family Budget
Changing Your Perspective — Watching Your Savings Grow
Dealing with Debt
Saving Throughout the Ages
Part 2: Piecing Together Section 529 Plans
Chapter 5: Laying Down the Basics of Section 529 Plans
Discovering the Parts of 529 Plans
Figuring Out the Qualifying Criteria
Contributing to a 529 Plan
Picking Your Plan
Weighing the 529 plan features
Chapter 6: Applying Section 529 Plans to Your Household
Opening a Plan
Funding a Plan
Managing Your Investments
Taking Qualifying Distributions
What Does Uncle Sam Have to Say?
Chapter 7: Weighing the Pros and Cons of Section 529 Plans
Pondering the Pros of Section 529 Plans
Working Around the 529 Shortcomings
Part 3: Uncovering Coverdell Accounts
Chapter 8: The Changing World of Coverdell Education Savings Accounts
Covering the Basics
Making Account Contributions
Taking Distributions
Transferring Accounts and Changing Account Beneficiaries
Chapter 9: The Mechanics of Coverdells
Getting a Handle on What You Want
Opening a Plan
Devising an Effective Investment Strategy
Selecting Investments and Placing Buy Orders
Paying Into a Coverdell Education Savings Account
Managing Your Account
Making Distributions
Chapter 10: Figuring the Pluses and Minuses of Coverdell Accounts
Knowing the Pluses of Coverdells
Dealing with Coverdell Snags
Part 4: Filling in the Gaps: More Ways to Save for College
Chapter 11: Saving for College with Qualified U.S. Savings Bonds
Choosing Savings Bonds that Work
Determining Who’s Eligible
Buying and Redeeming Savings Bonds
Rating the Usefulness of Saving Bonds for You
Chapter 12: Setting Up Personal Investment Accounts for Yourself and Your Kids
Pondering Personal Investment Accounts
Looking at Your Investment Options
Registering Your Account
Managing Your Personal Investment Account
Chapter 13: Saving for Education in Trust Accounts
Getting the Definitive Word on Trusts
Looking at Types of Trusts and How They Work
Paying Tax on Your Trust
Identifying the Pros and Cons of Trusts in Relation to College Savings
Chapter 14: Saving in Your Retirement Plans: The IRA Dilemma
Using Your Traditional IRA to Cover College Expenses
Tapping into Your Roth IRA for College Savings
Making Early Distributions from Other Retirement Accounts
Rolling Over Retirement Accounts to Obtain Maximum Benefit
Chapter 15: Buying, Selling, or Refinancing Real Estate
Saving for College in Your House
Using Home Equity
Refinancing your house
Turning Your Vacation Home into a Short-Term Rental
Avoiding The Dormitory Experience: Buying A Place for Your Student to Live
Chapter 16: Funding Education Using Whole Life Insurance
Understanding The Difference Between Term, Universal and Whole Life Policies
Using Cash Value in a Whole Life Policy
Borrowing Against Cash Value to Pay Education Costs
Defining What’s Taxable and What’s Not in a Whole Life Policy
Chapter 17: Accessing Scholarships and Awards
Searching for Scholarships, Fellowships, and Grants
Acquiring College Funding in Exchange for Service
Looking at Tax Issues Regarding Scholarships, Fellowships, and Grants
Chapter 18: Turning On the Financial Aid Faucet
Financial Aid 101
Applying for Aid (Yes, the Dreaded FAFSA)
Squeezing Out Every Drop of Available Money
Timing the receipt of taxable and tax-exempt income
Part 5: The Part of Tens
Chapter 19: Ten Musts for Successful Savings
Paying Into Your Savings Plans First and Regularly
Understanding Your Investments
Changing Investments When Necessary
Staying Current on Tax Law Changes
Being Realistic about Investment Returns
Not Counting on Great-Aunt Neela’s Inheritance
Funding Your Account Now — Not Later
Feeding Your Retirement Plan
Asking Questions of the Experts
Learning from Your Mistakes
Chapter 20: Ten Ways to Dodge the Tax Code Minefield
Knowing Who’s Giving and How Much
Being Aware of Your Income and Phaseout Amounts
Keeping Track of Your Contributions
Avoiding the Penalties for Overfunding an Account
Knowing Your Effective Tax Rate
Staying Aware of Tax Laws in Your State
Keeping Track of Your Qualified Education Expenses
Staying Informed about Changes in Current Laws
Being Honest about Your Child’s College Plans
Getting Answers by Asking Questions
Appendix: Section 529 Plans, State by State
Index
About the Author
Connect with Dummies
End User License Agreement
Chapter 2
TABLE 2-1: Sample Yearly Tuition Costs
TABLE 2-2: Sample Yearly Tuition Costs at Private 4-Year Colleges and Universiti...
TABLE 2-3: Sample Yearly Tuition Costs for Medical Schools
TABLE 2-4: Sample Yearly Tuition Costs for Law Schools
TABLE 2-5: Sample Yearly Tuition Costs for Business Schools
TABLE 2-6: Sample Yearly Tuition Costs for Veterinary Schools
TABLE 2-7: Sample Full-Time Undergraduate Tuition for Online And Low-Residency L...
Chapter 4
TABLE 4-1 Truly Wasteful Spending
TABLE 4-2 Systematic Savings (at 1.5% Interest, Compounded Daily)
Chapter 5
TABLE 5-1 Qualified Education Expenses for 529 Plans
Chapter 6
TABLE 6-1 Prepaid Tuition (PT) and Guaranteed Savings (GS) Plans, by State
TABLE 6-2: Figuring Out Taxable Income from a 529 Distribution
Chapter 7
TABLE 7-1: Comparing Saving In a Section 529 Prepaid Tuition Plan with Saving In...
TABLE 7-2: Comparing saving in a Section 529 savings plan with an ordinary inves...
Chapter 8
TABLE 8-1: Worksheet to figure out limited contribution to a Coverdell account f...
Chapter 10
TABLE 10-1 Nathan's Federal Income Tax Situation
TABLE 10-2 Nathan's Federal Income Tax Situation When He Takes Nonqualifying Dis...
Chapter 11
TABLE 11-1: 2021 And 2022 Income Phaseouts for Tax-Free Series EE and Series I S...
Chapter 15
TABLE 15-1 Calculating Net Equity Changes from Home Updates
Chapter 17
TABLE 17-1 Tax Treatment of Scholarship and Fellowship Payments
Chapter 6
FIGURE 6-1: Necessary info for automatic fund transfer.
Chapter 9
FIGURE 9-1: Calculating the tax on multiple plan withdrawals.
Chapter 15
FIGURE 15-1: Calculating capital gains on the sale of a house.
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Table of Contents
Begin Reading
Appendix: Section 529 Plans, State by State
Index
About the Author
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Welcome to 529 & Education Savings Plans For Dummies, the practical reference for those who are thinking about and planning for all types of education in the future for themselves or those nearest and dearest to them and who want an explanation of all the options — pro and con — that can help them save for it.
Education. Whether you’ve had an abundance of it or feel that you’re missing a few courses here and there, you’ve read all the information, looked at the charts and graphs, and know that people with the best educations land better jobs and earn better pay than those who don’t. So, of course, because you want the very best for yourself and your family (you do — that’s why you’re reading this), you want everyone you know, including yourself, to have that opportunity.
That is until you look at the price tag. You’re already paying for food, housing, and clothing (not to mention phone, cable, insurance, and everything else under the sun, including dog grooming) and maybe even stashing a little bit into your retirement plan. And then, you sneak a peek at the projected cost of private school or college for the year in which your student expects to begin. And just as you never look at the least wrinkled car in a car crash, your eye automatically drifts to the highest number on that chart of projected costs. And you begin to see stars.
There’s no question: Education costs continue to soar, even when the rest of the economy stagnates, and this reality is not likely to change any time soon. Fortunately, everyone, including you, the various governments (federal and state), and the schools themselves, are in on this secret. Everyone can plan well in advance of that eventual first day of school — whether it’s kindergarten or graduate school — and plot ways to get that child there and how to help you pay the bills when they come due. Consider this book to be your accomplice.
The world of education savings plans is forever changing (or so it seems, as legislative leaders can’t seem to resist continuously tweaking the laws). This is another way of saying that it also can be complicated and confusing for everyone, including professionals, financial planners, tax folks, and your local bank or brokerage.
In this one-size-fits-all world, the powers that be have recognized that all people don’t save money the same way. Some save more, some save less, some can live with risk, and others can’t tolerate any risk. Clearly, no two are alike, but you’re all present or potential savers. Numerous options exist that make saving possible and desirable for everyone.
Piling savings option upon savings option has created opportunities for most people. But all the new options have also muddied the waters because choosing between Plan A and Plan B can be downright difficult when they seem so similar. So, many people may choose to opt out, admitting confusion and doing nothing because it’s all so confusing, and no one wants to screw up a choice with so much riding on it.
And yet, it doesn’t have to be that way. I’m here to tell you that it is possible to understand the costs associated with education, both right now and in the future. It's also possible to find ways to pay for those costs in the most advantageous manner for you, both from a personal and tax perspective. And you can’t focus on the personal and ignore the tax implications, nor can you do the reverse. Both are essential components, and the most successful savings program considers both elements.
That’s where this book comes in. It’s designed to explain the strategies out there to help you save, save, save. There’s no doubt that the bill will be large; there’s also no question that, with planning, strategy, and purpose, you can achieve your goal and provide the means that will allow you and your family all the benefits of a quality, paid-for education.
529 & Education Savings Plans For Dummies is simply a way to find a reasonable solution to a seemingly unreasonable problem: saving for future education costs in the sanest, least stressful way possible. In keeping with the theme of stress reduction, you can use this book in a variety of ways:
As a reference:
It’s all here: the ins, the outs, the do’s, and the don’ts. The world of education savings is one of very specific rules, and they’re here, in all their glory, and they’re all explained.
As an advisor
: It’s a case of the very good savings techniques, the merely okay savings techniques, and the truly ugly techniques (which you really want to avoid), and this book highlights them all. Indeed, what works for you may not work for your neighbor, but every savings option involves risks, concerns, and just-plain crystal ball reading. This book explores all the ups and downs and ins and outs.
As a little light reading
: Amazingly enough, the topic of money can be mildly amusing, and education savings is no exception. Read this with an eye toward the absurd, and you won’t go far wrong.
Parts of 529 & Education Savings Plans For Dummies are about very specific situations you will most likely never encounter. Still, this book would be lacking as a complete reference if I didn’t include a lot of the minutiae in the text on the chance that someone, somewhere, may need to know what happens to a Section 529 plan in the event of a death of a plan owner, for example.
Also, as a caution, be aware that any projections in the book are just that: projections. I have no special hotline to the powers that determine rates of returns on investments, increases in tuition payments, inflation rates, tax rates, utility rates, or postage increases (which might be really useful). Increases and decreases may be greater or lesser over time — I have no way of really knowing. All the projections should provide you with is a picture of relationships between like numbers; don’t read any more into my crystal ball projections than that.
To help you navigate through this book, I use the following conventions:
Italic is used to emphasize and highlight new words or defined terms.
Boldfaced text indicates keywords in bulleted lists or the action part of numbered steps.
Monofont is used for Web addresses.
Sidebars, which look like text enclosed in a shaded gray box, consist of information that’s interesting to know but not necessarily critical to your understanding of the chapter or section topic.
The world of money and taxes is rife with assumptions, foolish and otherwise. Here are some of the assumptions I’ve made about you:
You’re not aware of the variety of ways to save for education available to you, or you’re aware but baffled by the number of plans or the way the plans work.
You may have some idea of how much sending Junior to college will put you back, but you need more details.
If you’ve been saving for college and now find out that you can pay for private school tuition with your plan, you probably feel as though you’re not saving enough.
You can’t walk into a bookstore or surf the Internet without buying every book you see with a snazzy, eye-catching, strikingly-appealing, jaw-droppin’, good-looking, yellow-and-black cover.
If you’re not yet saving for any form of education, you may feel that you don’t have room in your budget for that expense. After paying your monthly living costs, you may have nothing left to save.
If you identify with any of the above, 529 & Education Savings Plans For Dummies gives you the information you need to start saving or kick your savings into high gear.
This book takes all the different components of education savings — from its necessity, through all the different sorts of savings plans, and finally to how to augment with grants, loans, and scholarships — and breaks them down into easily digestible chunks (okay, parts, if you want to get technical about it). Each part is comprised of a few chapters. The following briefly describes each part:
There’s no question; the number is huge, but how huge is it? Sounds like the start of a bad joke, eh? Well, it isn’t a joke, but dealing with the big cash question doesn’t have to be that bad. After a brief overview of the scope of the book, this part looks at the current and projected future cost of education, including primary and secondary schools, apprenticeships, vocational and trade schools, public and private colleges, two- and four-year institutions, and graduate and professional schools. It focuses on savings techniques, and finally, it lets you know who’s available to make contributions to the savings pool.
A venerable member of the education savings plan sweepstakes, Section 529 plans offer seemingly unlimited choices and high contribution limits (at least if you listen to the people who are trying to sell you their particular plan). This part dissects these plans, explaining how they work, why they work, and when they work — or don’t — as the case may be.
Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (formerly known as Education IRAs) have now become real players in the education savings arena, and more and more financial advisors, banks, and brokerages are touting their benefits. This part explores them in full detail, showing their good and bad points and explaining how and when they might (or might not) make sense for you.
Saving for education has been around a lot longer than Section 529 plans or Coverdell accounts. So Part 4 examines some of the more traditional ways to save and shows situations where these tried and true methods still may make sense for you. But what happens when all else fails and your savings come up a bit short? This part explains how the world of financial aid works — loans, grants, and scholarships —and how the money you’ve saved for college may factor into financial aid decisions.
It’s the part you’ve hopefully come to know and love. The For Dummies Part of Tens — this time with an education-savings twist. Do you like easily accessible top-ten lists? Here you go. The whole point of so-called “education savings plans” is first, to save, and second, to pay as little tax on your savings as possible. The chapters in this part give you hints on saving successfully and tell you what you must do to dodge as many taxes as possible. The book includes one final element that’s not technically a Part of Tens — it lists way more than ten things. But I thought I should let you know about the appendix, which gives you a more detailed look at the various Section 529 plans offered by each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia, plus one private prepaid tuition plan. The appendix gives you an apples-to-apples comparison of what is currently out there so you can make the best decision for your particular situation.
The icons you come across in this book identify information or words of caution that you may find especially helpful.
You have a lot to remember when trying to slot your savings into the rules and regulations surrounding many of these education savings plans. This icon alerts you to important information you don’t want to forget because it can often make the entire process of saving for education go a lot more smoothly.
If you’re the type of person who always needs to know more than the basics, check out the information next to this guy. It points out information that you don’t absolutely need to know to save (but you can always use it to impress your friends).
Life is rarely straightforward, and saving for education may be even less so. When you see this icon, you’ll find a strategy to help you get the most out of your savings or make it easier to put money away.
This book is littered with ideas of what not to do if you want your education savings plans to succeed. When you find this icon, you’ve just landed on one of them.
If you want to go beyond this book, check out the Cheat Sheet, where I summarize the different college savings plan avenues available to you, from 529 plans, Coverdell accounts, Series EE and Series II savings bonds, and other savings vehicles.
If you want to and have the time, you can read this book from cover to cover. This book gives you a great view of how much, how, and where to save money for education. But if you don’t have the time or the interest, you may choose to hop around from topic to topic, skipping those that don’t apply to you and paying more careful attention to those that do. That’s one of the great things about For Dummies books. You can get in and get out wherever and whenever you choose. If the information you need to understand a certain topic is covered elsewhere, the text will direct you, so you don’t need to worry that you’re missing basic information by skipping over a portion of the book.
Part 1
IN THIS PART …
The skinny on education savings
Get the down-low on education costs
Find out what resources are available
Discover the tax implications of funding education savings accounts
Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
Figuring out what and how to save
Considering Section 529 plans
Taking a look at Coverdell Education Savings Accounts
Evaluating other savings options
Making the most of your savings
You may have just found out that you’re pregnant. Maybe you’re at the point where the college catalogs are beginning to accumulate on your dining room table. Or perhaps your family is somewhere in the middle, with your children out of diapers but not yet into calculus. Wherever your family falls in the age spectrum, one thing is certain: Either in your immediate family or in your extended one, we all want our children to receive the best possible education for them. That might mean public schools all the way, private schools at some point, trade schools, or apprenticeships. The options are endless, but so may be the potential cost.
And therein lies a problem: Although your child can receive a primary and secondary education without incurring significant added expense in your budget (unless you consider things like your local parents’ group’s fundraisers), there is very little that’s free in the way of post-secondary education. For most of us, the privilege of helping your child obtain that degree or learn a trade comes with a hefty price tag. And, while I was convinced when my son was born that he’d receive full scholarships all the way, that is the exception and not the rule (and no, he wasn’t one of the exceptions. Darn!). If you’ve already explored the costs of a post-secondary education, you know that the numbers often are large; if you haven’t yet experienced the pleasure, rest assured that the amounts in question will likely take your breath away. So far, we’ve only spoken about post-secondary education. In this book, we’re also going to talk about private schools for grades K-12, apprenticeships, trade schools, and learning opportunities for differently abled children.
In solving any problem, you need to remain calm and focused on the task at hand. That’s where this book may help — by making you methodically look at the current state of your education savings, helping you leave your misconceptions about saving at the door, and showing you ways to begin or increase savings. After you convince yourself that you’re able to save something and you actually begin to put some money away, you’ve won a major victory; everything that follows will be easier. Just keep in mind that saving now will create opportunities and open doors for your children in the future.
Up until now, crunching the numbers and figuring out what you think college will cost has usually been where you begin and end your exploration of the topic of how to pay for future educational costs. But after you resolve to start saving and you take the projected costs and create a plan to save for that amount, it’s time to take this exercise a bit more seriously.
Depending on the size of your family and your expectations, adding up the cost of a college education can be a fairly straightforward calculation, or it may become quite involved.
Be realistic about the capabilities and ambitions of your future student and your ability to pay.
Your straight-A student may have to scale back on their dreams of MIT if your budget, including amounts you can add from your current and future earnings, only goes as far as your local state college. (However, they may want to seriously consider applying for some scholarship aid as outlined in Chapter 17.)
Likewise, there’s little point in saving for an Ivy League education if your child has plans to open their own auto repair shop. And clearly, the more children you’re educating, the thinner your resources may be stretched per child. (Although, depending on how closely spaced your children are in age, this situation may actually work to your advantage if you need to apply for financial aid, as you will learn about in Chapter 18.)
No matter how late you may begin saving specifically for future college costs, the entire weight of doing so doesn’t necessarily need to rest solely on your shoulders, nor do you need to begin to save from nothing.
Chapter 3 helps you find hidden assets you may have available to augment your education savings. It may also alert you to other resources you haven’t even thought of — for example, family, friends, or even the student himself. Just because these are your children, you may not have to come up with the full amount of their education costs from your pockets alone.
Too many people equate saving for the future with current deprivation. For most people, living expenses currently equal (or even exceed income), and they may not have money left over in the family budget for saving. Clearly, if you fit into this category, you’re not going to be able to save unless you make some changes in your life. Chapter 4 shows you some relatively painless adjustments that will maximize the amount of money you can shave from your current budget while minimizing the effect on your life.
Most believe that saving money is a good thing, and the federal government is prepared to back up that philosophy with a variety of savings programs that contain built-in tax incentives, some of which you may already be using (tax-deferred retirement plans, anyone?). One of these types of incentive savings plans is the Qualified Tuition Program, or Section 529 plan, which is designed solely to save for college or any other type of qualified education, either tax-exempt or tax-deferred, depending on a number of factors. Like almost everything else the government cooks up, though, Section 529 plans aren’t as simple to navigate as everyone selling these plans would have you think. Chapter 5 gives you the tools you need to understand how these accounts work and how you can best make them work for you.
Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code is long, complex, and not for the faint of heart. Still, savings accounts that fall under its regulations can be a fantastic way to save for future educational expenses. However, to make it work, you have to understand its requirements; there’s little point in setting up one of these accounts if you don’t cross your t’s and dot your i’s just like the IRS wants. Remember, the IRS doesn’t have a category of “close, but no cigar.” Either your account will qualify under the regulations for tax deferrals or exemptions, or it won’t. And if it doesn’t, the consequences may be costly.
Creating a successful savings plan involves more than following the rules, although compliance with the rules is a big part. Chapter 6 shows you how to actually begin saving money and then put those savings to work for you.
You’re a big factor in determining whether your savings program flies or falls. Understanding the various ways your savings may earn money and the different investment options available is an important piece of creating the substantial savings you’ll need to see your children through college.
Even when you understand the rules, manage to regularly save major portions of your income, and discover how to manipulate the investment choices to your best advantage, events in your life may require you to make sudden changes in your Section 529 plan savings accounts. Life happens, whether you’re prepared or not, and often the last thing you want to think about when it does is the effect on your investments. Chapter 7 alerts you to some planning opportunities with your Section 529 plan accounts and how to make corrections to your college savings when your life doesn’t exactly follow the course you originally laid out.
If the world of tax-deferred/tax-exempt savings accounts were an ice cream parlor, Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) might be rum raisin. Rum raisin might not be the most popular flavor, but it might be just what you want on a particular day. Not surprisingly, many people prefer Coverdell accounts when shopping for a place and a way to save money for college. Coverdell accounts provide a wider range of investment options and increased control over the account, and certain expenses qualify for tax exemption under Coverdell rules that aren’t under Section 529 requirements. Whatever your reasons, Coverdell ESAs may be just the account flavor you want today.
Internal Revenue Code Section 530, covering Coverdell ESAs, follows hot on the heels of Code Section 529 (those government sorts are sticklers for going in order). In it, you find all the rules, regulations, and other assorted gobbledygook that govern these sorts of accounts.
But you actually don’t have to dive into the tortured syntax of the Internal Revenue Code since I’ve already done that for you. In Chapter 8, you discover what rules you need to know to open an account, save money inside an account once it’s been opened, and then make distributions from the account, tax-free or tax-deferred (depending on a number of factors), for qualified educational expenses.
You’ve probably discovered by now that successful savings involve far more than sticking your money in a passbook savings account at your local bank. And, while your investment options are seriously limited inside a Section 529 plan, you have far more latitude in investment decisions when you open a Coverdell ESA. Chapter 9 explores where you can open an account, what information you need to open that account, what sorts of investments you can put into an account, and how to decide what sorts of investments work best for you. Finally, we explain the nuts and bolts of what happens when you begin withdrawing from your student’s Coverdell account to pay for qualified educational expenses.
Saving now for future educational costs may seem like a no-brainer to you but negotiating the ins and outs of any tax-deferred/tax-exempt savings plan isn’t quite so simple. And, not to put too fine a point on it, Coverdell ESAs, while a valuable weapon in the arsenal of college savings accounts, may not be the right choice for you. Chapter 10 gives you some insights into what’s involved in effectively managing a Coverdell account for your student and what pitfalls to avoid. Finally, if, despite your best efforts, you unintentionally land in a pile of muck, you find some strategies here to turn lemons into lemonade and perform some damage control.
People went to college and private schools long before the Internal Revenue Code, and parents and grandparents saved for those costs even when tax deferrals and/or tax exemptions weren’t around. You can save money in many other ways, some even specifically for college. Even though they may not be as tax advantageous as Section 529 plans and Coverdell ESAs, they may make perfect sense in your overall savings plan. And if you’re not able to save enough to cover the full cost, all is still not lost: Various scholarships, grants, and loan programs are available to cover any shortfall you may have between what you’ve saved and the cost of your child’s education.
Whether you’re able to save only relatively small amounts, you’re uncertain about your potential student’s future plans, or you love the safety and security found only in U.S. Savings Bonds, you may find that this is an attractive way to save for future college expenses and still take advantage of some tax exemptions on the interest earned on your bonds. Chapter 11 explains how you may be able to use certain U.S. Savings Bonds to pay at least some of your child’s post-secondary educational expenses tax-free. It shows you who may invest, how you may invest, and how to allocate and report your taxable and tax-exempt earnings when you redeem your bonds.
It may seem strange to even think this, but the trade-off for taking advantage of the income tax breaks available through Section 529 plans and Coverdell ESAs is that you’re guaranteeing that you will use that money to pay for qualified educational expenses. If only all of life were so certain and so sure.
Many of you may be hesitating over how much to save in these plans — or whether to save at all — because of your great uncertainty over your child’s future plans. When you save in traditional investment and savings accounts, you eliminate that uncertainty because you’re not tied to using your savings in any one way. Of course, in exchange for that freedom to spend your savings as you will, you lose any opportunity to defer or exempt tax on your earnings, but if your world is an uncertain place, you may find that’s a small price to pay.
In Chapter 12, you find out about different types of investment accounts, different options of account ownership and their consequences, ways to invest and manage a personal investment account, and, finally, the taxation of investment income.
For most people, the phrase “trust fund” brings to mind visions of great wealth and privilege; in other words, it has nothing to do with you. And that picture couldn’t be further from the truth. If you save money in any form, then you’re a potential candidate to create and fund a trust. Chapter 13 explores some different types of trusts and explains why a trust may actually make sense for you as an education savings tool.
Using retirement funds to pay for college usually isn’t the best savings strategy to pay for these costs. In certain limited circumstances, however (such as when parents are older or you face unplanned educational expenses), it may make some sense to access funds from a retirement account to pay qualified educational expenses. Chapter 14 explains the tax consequences when you use so-called retirement savings to pay for educational expenses and alerts you to some major considerations you need to consider.
If you (or you and the bank) own your home, you may be sitting on a larger nest egg than you ever considered. A combination of rising home values and shrinking mortgage loan balances has created a large pool of equity for many people, equity that may be made available to fund educational expenses. Chapter 15 illustrates how you may use your house to help put one or more children through college.
You may have been paying premiums for years on whole-life policies without ever considering the considerable cash value accumulated inside the policy. And, if you took out those policies because you wanted to make sure that the money would be there, in case you weren’t, for your children to go to college, this cash value can be used to help your child go to the school of their choice. Chapter 16 will show you how to use this particular tool to provide benefits after your death and as a savings tool during your life.
Not every potential student is an academic genius or a future first-round NFL draft pick, but you don’t necessarily need to conclude that your child won’t qualify for scholarships and grants.
Chapter 17 describes many sources of outright scholarships and grants. Some carry no strings whatsoever for your student (other than actually attending college), and others require some sort of payback, either upfront or after your child completes their education.
You’re obviously reading this because you don’t want to have to resort to borrowing money to pay for your children’s college costs. And hopefully, you’ll never have to touch the pages of Chapter 18. Still, it’s not the end of the world if you do. This chapter explains the types of financial aid available and assesses the costs. It also peeks at some of the benefits and downsides of borrowing money for college.
This book is, at its heart, about successfully saving and investing money for future education costs on the one hand and minimizing taxes on the other. And if that were the beginning and end of the matter, you’d be looking at a fairly straightforward task, one in which, if you followed all the rules, you’d achieve the desired result at the end of the game.
Unfortunately, you don’t live in a vacuum, and many forces impact your ability to save adequately, achieve reasonable investment returns on your savings, and limit the amount of income tax you’ll pay on those investment returns. You’re operating on a field that is rarely level and that shifts and shimmies through no fault of your own. As a result, you need to be aware of how large and small changes, whether they result from government policy, market forces, or changes in your family’s projected college cost needs, will affect your savings programs. And you need to be prepared to move with those changes — to adjust your savings programs to account for these other factors.
At the end of the day, your success will depend not only on how often you make deposits into your education savings plans or how large the deposits are but also on how well that money works for you. Your goal is not to achieve a large balance in one or more college savings accounts. Your goal is to watch your children begin their adult lives with good educations and marketable skills while hopefully reducing or completely eliminating college debt.
Chapter 2
IN THIS CHAPTER
Figuring out all the pieces of the financial puzzle
Considering costs of different types of schools: primary, secondary, and post-secondary
Going on to graduate or professional school
Whether you went to private schools and/or college (and regardless of who paid for your education), the joy of planning and saving for that event for your children, your grandchildren, or even yourself and your spouse has to be tempered somewhat by the uncertainty of the financial costs involved. That uncertainty is the exact amount of the eventual bill because clearly, the cost is going up, up, up, and never down.
And there’s the rub: How can you possibly know how much to save if you can’t figure out how much that education will cost?
In this chapter, I break down all education costs into their components and compare different types of education. If you know your prospective student plans to attend a prestigious medical school at the end of the rainbow, you need to plan accordingly. If, however, your budding student is fascinated with all things dead and tries to embalm the family pet before burial, you may be looking at a funeral services school, which costs much less than medical school. The point is that you need to be realistic about your expectations and the talents and desires of the prospective student before jumping into your savings program. You want to save enough, but saving far more than you need for education is pointless.
Because tuition is usually the highest cost for both private schools and colleges, many people make the mistake of saving only for tuition. But other costs, such as housing (if your student is living away from home), books, and supplies, can account for a large chunk of your child’s expenses — a large enough chunk that you should include those costs in your savings plan.
In this section, I explain what costs you should start saving for and give you an idea of how much those costs are.
Although I cover the major education costs in this section, they aren’t the only costs you may encounter as you try to give your child the most suitable education for them. Although I don’t suggest you start saving for a beer fund, be prepared to pay for other items, such as parking permits, transportation, health insurance, and a movie ticket or a new pair of jeans.
Tuition refers to probably the largest cost for college: the fees for actual instruction. For the academic year 2021–2022, the average tuition costs for a public university averaged $10,740 for an in-state student and more than $27,560 for an out-of-state student. Room and board added almost $12,000 to those numbers. Interestingly enough, the two smallest states by population had the highest and lowest in-state tuition fees: Vermont at $17,747 and Wyoming at $6,097. Clearly, there’s a huge difference based on where you live. The numbers for private four-year universities are much direr: average tuition was a lofty $38,070, and average room and board costs totaled $13,620. Just as with state schools, there is an enormous difference between the Harvards, MITs, and CalTechs on the high end as opposed to Brigham Young University on the low end. In 2021-2022, there was a more than $57,000 difference between the highest and lowest private university tuition costs.
Inflation for school tuition isn’t capped at whatever the current inflation rate is for the country. Depending on a number of factors, tuitions sometimes outstrip the inflation rate. Other times, such as during the recent COVID pandemic, tuition has actually dropped. Remember, though, that the number of years tuition has dropped is far outweighed by the number of years it has increased, and given that students are now returning to campuses, you can expect tuition rates to start an upward climb once again.
If you want your child to attend private schools for all or some of their primary and secondary years, there are many options. Of course, the cheapest, by far, is public education, which is available to all students regardless of where they live. However, all public educations are not created equal, and if you’re not living in a tony suburb of a major city that cherishes education, you may decide that private education is the way to go. Average tuition costs for a private education vary widely. If you can access a parochial school, the tuition will be much lower than if you board your child at a posh academy in leafy New England. Once again, the choice is yours. Average private school tuition in 2021-2022 was $11,146 for the primary grades and $15,762 for the secondary grades. Multiply these numbers to see the total you’re looking at for a 13-year private school education — this isn’t chump change.
These numbers may seem insurmountable, especially if you’re entering the savings game fairly late; however, some relief may be available. Only a small percentage of students (and their families) pay the top-dollar price for college, and even some aid is available for private schools. Many schools and universities offer huge amounts of outright grants and other forms of financial aid (other than loans, although those are available to all), and scholarships and grants for secondary and post-secondary schools from other sources may be available (see Chapters 16 and 17).
If you’re fairly certain your child will attend a public college, you may want to investigate whether your state offers a Section 529 prepaid tuition plan (described in Chapters 5 through 7) to help you pay for those upcoming tuition bills. Even if you can’t save for tuition costs in one of these plans, saving money in any Section 529 savings plan or Coverdell Education Savings Account (see Chapters 8 through 10) will allow your college savings to grow faster than conventional savings accounts.
Up to $10,000 per year is available from 529 plans and Coverdell ESAs to pay private primary or secondary school tuition. This money may only be used for tuition and not for any other ancillary costs of that education, such as room and board, computer equipment, or other fees required. Still, if you have a well-funded plan already set up and you find that the local public school isn’t serving your student’s best interests, using these plans to pay for qualified tuition at a private school is now an option. In addition, many states now allow up to $10,000 lifetime to repay already existing student loans or pay for apprenticeship programs that were previously excluded from 529 and Coverdell plans’ qualifying distributions. Check out this book's appendix for a look at the expenses each state’s plans will allow.
You may come from a family who assumes that all those going on to higher learning will receive their post-secondary education at the local campuses. And you may fully expect when your student reaches that point, they will live at home. If so, you can probably skip this part, although you should be stashing some money away for good, reliable transportation, whether that means a car, bus, or subway fare.
If, on the other hand, you suspect that your student won’t be satisfied going to the local schools (or if your area is like mine and doesn’t really have many post-secondary offerings), you need to add the cost of housing into your savings plan — either college-owned housing or local rental real estate.
Most colleges provide some sort of room and board options in the form of on-campus or university-owned housing, and they gladly tack those fees onto the tuition bill. Because most university-owned housing is mandatory for all noncommuting students for at least the first year or two, if you plan on sending your child to college, these costs must factor into your savings plan. For 2021-2022, average college-owned housing and a basic board plan cost between $12,000 and $13,500. Where your college falls in this range depends on a few factors, such as the following:
Location:
Generally, city schools tend to have higher housing costs than schools out in the country.
Size:
Generally, larger colleges tend to have higher housing costs than smaller colleges.
Number of students in a room:
If your child insists on having a room all to their lonesome, expect to pay a premium for that privilege. Generally speaking, the more students crammed into a single room, the less you’re likely to pay for your student.
Room and board charges paid directly to an eligible school (the school will be happy to tell you if it’s eligible) can be paid by using tax-free distributions from your Section 529 and/or Coverdell plans (see Chapters 5 and 8). Remember, though, if you’re paying for room and board for a private secondary school, this is not a qualified expense and, therefore, is not eligible for payment from either a 529 or Coverdell plan. And don’t forget; for a low, low overall price, you can turn your long-distance student into a commuter by purchasing a second home for their use close to their school. Chapter 15 gives you the lowdown on how to accomplish this.
Although colleges and universities attempt to expand their student populations, many fail to increase their own housing to meet the increased number of students, pushing more students into the local housing market. In areas where rental units are being added, this isn’t a problem; the rental units increase at a rate equal (hopefully) to the number of students seeking housing. However, many older cities have very limited rental housing, and the increased number of students seeking it has forced prices up sharply. So, if you plan to rent an apartment or house for your student, costs become more variable, making it more difficult to predict how much you may need to save for your student’s housing needs.
If you live close to the college your child attends, the easiest way to check local rental costs is by reading the classified ads and haunting the rental board in the college’s housing office. If you’re living further away from the action, the Internet can be the way to go. Many newspapers, both big and small, have websites that almost always include the papers’ classified ads. Craigslist is also available in most markets. Unfortunately, many apartments are rented long before the ad ever appears in the newspaper, so relying on newspaper ads is probably an exercise in futility. The lag time between the ad appearing in the paper and the website being updated may prevent you from actually locating an apartment this way, but you can get a really great idea of what rental costs are.
The cost of a rental is only the cost of the rental — it may not include utilities (heat in the northern states and air conditioning in the southern states can both be very expensive), and it certainly doesn’t include food. You need to add the cost of any utilities not included, plus money for food or a meal ticket at the university, to accurately compare your costs to the university’s room and board plan.
Check the amount of room and board the college considers a “qualified education expense.” (You can often find this information buried on its website, or just phone one of the college’s financial aid officers.) The money you spend on rent to a non-university landlord can be paid using tax-free distributions from your Section 529 and Coverdell plans (see Chapters 5 and 8). However, if you spend more than the college’s estimated amount of room and board on a non-university landlord, you may want to pay the excess some other way. Distributions taken from your Section 529 and Coverdell plans in excess of “qualified expenses” are subject to income tax and a 10 percent penalty.
Okay, so you know you’ve saved enough for tuition and room and board, but the need for money doesn’t stop once you unload the SUV on the first day of orientation. After your student is at school, they need to buy books and other supplies and