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Ask Dr. Don
By
Don
Taylor,
Ph.D.,
CFA
Bankrate.com |
Investing for college
Dear Dr. Don,
I have $10,000 to invest toward my daughter's college education
in four years. How should I invest this money?
Quadrangle Queen
Dear Quad Queen,
The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (the
Bush tax bill) has given you more college-savings options than you
can shake a stick at.
The Education IRA has been renamed
the Coverdell Education Savings Account, and CESA
contribution limits were increased to $2,000 in
2002. Qualified distributions out of a Section 529
College Savings Plan are free of federal taxation.
The Savings
Bonds for Education plan lets you buy savings bonds in your
name and not pay federal income taxes on the interest income when
the bonds are redeemed for qualified education expenses. (Savings
bonds are exempt from state and local income taxes.) There are some
income limitations on your ability to participate in the savings-bond
program, as there are with CESAs.
Since 2002, you can contribute to both a Section 529
Plan and an Education IRA plan, but total contributions to a CESA
from all sources for a named beneficiary can't exceed $2,000.
Section 529 plans include both state prepaid tuition
plans and college savings accounts. College savings accounts aren't
as limiting as the prepaid tuition plans in selecting out-of-state
schools, but the prepaid tuition plans in some states have made
strides in making the plans more portable.
There is more investment flexibility with a CESA account
but more financial planning options and control available in a Section
529 account. For example, you could open a brokerage account and
trade stocks in a CESA.
You won't have that capability in a Section 529 account,
but the IRS has recently improved the flexibility of how Section
529 Accounts are invested by ruling that an account could be rolled
to another account once each calendar year, very much like an IRA
rollover. With $10,000 to invest, you could split the baby and put
$2,000 to work next year in a CESA account and $8,000 to work this
year in a Section 529 account.
SavingforCollege.com
rates the state plans from one to five mortarboards and has separate
ratings for out-of-state residents. Investing in your home state's
plans may give you a tax break, so start by looking at your state
plan. And remember that not all state plans are created equal. If
you're not happy with the options in your state's plan, then it's
time to go shopping!
Brokerage firms can offer you Section 529 programs
from the states where they are named to manage plan investments,
so you can talk to your broker about what plans they offer. It will
be easier for most people to compare state plans by using a Section
529 Evaluator like the one on SavingforCollege and contacting
the state you select for enrollment information.
With only four years until your daughter expects to
start college, it makes sense to invest fairly conservatively. At
this point you should be more worried about tax consequences and
protecting principal than looking for high investment returns. It's
also important to consider how this money will impact your daughter's
ability to qualify for various financial-aid packages.
-- Updated: Oct. 19,
2006
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