Title: Investing for College
1Investing for College
Financial Planning for Women Jean Lown, FCHD
Dept., USU Tiffany Smith, student
2Upcoming FPW Programs
- April 13 Getting Ready for Estate Planning
- May 11 Stock Mutual Funds
- June 8 Teaching Kids About Money
- July 13 Retirement Planning Workbook
- August 10 Voluntary Simplicity
3Class Objective
To learn about tax-advantaged ways to invest for
college
- Coverdell Education Savings Accounts
- 529 College Savings Plans
4Overview
- Balancing goals Setting priorities
- Coverdell ESAs
- 529 college savings plans
5What about Retirement?
- Before you contribute to college savings for
children - Is your retirement investment plan on track?
- Pay down high interest consumer debt
6Set Priorities Balance Your Goals
- Ensuring retirement security is more important
than investing for college - Don't use retirement funds for college
- Students can borrow for college retirees can use
reverse mortgages but - Before investing for college, review your
retirement goals investment plans - Investing for these two goals is not mutually
exclusive (especially with grandparent help)
7Coverdell Education Savings Accounts (ESAs)
- Formerly called education IRAs
- Federal tax breaks
- Funds grow tax-free
- Withdrawals tax-free
- NO deduction for contribution
- All levels of education (K-12 college)
- No sunset provision
- Unlimited investment options
- Considered asset of parent for financial aid
8Coverdell Limitations
- Maximum contribution 2,000/year/child
- Contributors must have less than 190,000 in
modified adjusted gross income (95,000 for
single filers) in order to qualify for a full
2,000 contribution - No state tax advantages
- Child owns the at maturity (18 in UT)
9529 College Savings Plans
- Section 529 of IRS Code
- Federal state tax advantages
- Each state offers a different plan
- Owned by contributor (parent, etc.) for
beneficiary (child) - 10 penalty if not used for higher ed
10529 Advantages
- Funds grow tax-free (federal most states)
- Withdrawals are tax-free (federal state)
- Higher contribution limits than Coverdell
- Contributions are state tax deductible (UT)
- Owner controls the account
- Simple process
11Federal Financial Aid
- Account is treated as an asset of the parent or
other account owner in determining eligibility
for federal financial aid. - Your expected contribution towards your child's
college costs will include 5.6, or less, of the
value of your non-retirement assets - 35 assessment against assets owned in your
child's name or in a custodial account
12School-based Financial Aid
- Each school sets its own rules for its own
need-based scholarships - many schools take 529 accounts into account
- Federal financial aid rules change often
- Most financial aid is in the form of loans, not
grants
13529 Disadvantages
- Sunset provision current law expires Dec. 31,
2010 - Some state programs
- High fees
- Poor investment choices
- Brokers charge additional fees
14Utah Educational Savings Plan
- UESP is one of the best in the nation!
- Kiplingers Personal Finance Magazine
- Money magazine
- Savingforcollege.com
15UESP Features
- 9 investment options
- Ultra low fees
- No enrollment fees
- No minimum contributions
- No yearly fee for Utah residents (owners)
16Contributions Account Balances
- Contributions can be made by anyone
- No income limits for contributor
- No minimum initial contribution
- No minimum subsequent contribution
- May contribute up to 315,000/beneficiary
17Tax Advantages
- Earnings grow free from federal income tax
- When used for qualified higher ed expenses
earning are exempt from - federal income taxes
- Utah income taxes (for account owners who are UT
residents) - In 2005 UT taxpayers can deduct contributions
from UT income tax up to 1510 (3,020 for joint
filers)
18Fees Charges
- Deal directly with UESP
- No enrollment fees
- Administrative fee fund expense ratios
- 0.25 - .0414
- Max. annual maintenance fee 25
- Waived for owners who are Utah residents
19Qualified Expenses
- Tuition
- Room Board
- Books, supplies equipment
- Eligible post-secondary schools in U.S. or abroad
20Account Owner Control
- How when the money is used
- Change beneficiaries within family
- Child does not attend post-secondary
- Transfer funds to family member
- Control disbursements
- Parental asset for financial aid
21Investment Options
- 4 static options
- Investment mix does not change
- 5 age-based options
- Investment mix becomes more conservative as child
ages - UT Public Treasurers Investment Fund (PTIF)
- Vanguard Group mutual funds
22Static Investment Options
- Money market (Utah Public Treasurers Investment
Fund, PTIF) - SP Index Stock Fund
- Bond market Index Fund
- 5 Stock funds
23Age-Based Options
- SP/Bonds/Money market
- SP/bonds
- Diversified A
- Diversified B
- Diversified bonds emphasis
24Investment Options
- Review handout with 9 options
25Tax Deferral Pays!
- Tax-deferred money continues to grow
- The longer you defer paying tax,the more you
accumulate - Money contributed to a 529 plan grows
tax-deferred and is withdrawn tax free
26Non-qualified Disbursements
- 10 federal tax penalty on earnings
- No penalty on contributions
- All contributions are after-tax
- Made with money that was already taxed
- Similar to a Roth IRA
27What if law is not renewed?
- Current law expires 12/31/2010
- Earnings portion of disbursements will be taxed
at beneficiarys (childs) tax rate
28Related Resources
- UESP http//www.uesp.org
- 1-800-418-2551
- Internet Guide to Funding College
http//www.savingforcollege.com
29Questions?