 |
Ask Dr. Don
By
Don
Taylor,
Ph.D.,
CFA
Bankrate.com |
Investing for college
Dear Dr. Don,
What's the best way for me to save money for my 5-year-old son's
college fund?
Kristin College
Dear Kristin,
There are so many good ways that it's hard to decide. The three
principal choices are the Education IRA, since renamed the Coverdell
Education Savings Account, a Section 529 College Savings Plan, and
the Savings Bonds for Education plan.
It depends on whether you're planning to invest a
lump sum upfront or starting an investment plan where you make regular
contributions over time. I'd say it's far more typical for parents
to make regular contributions over time but ...
For small amounts, I like the Savings
Bonds for Education program because the bonds stay registered
in your name, and if you need the money for something other than
college expenses, there's no tax penalty to redeem the savings bonds.
(You do lose three-months' interest if you redeem the bonds within
five years of the purchase date.)
If you don't have an emergency fund to cover three
to six months worth of household expenses, this approach to college
savings helps you accomplish that goal, too. Both the Series EE
and Series I savings bonds qualify for this program.
This approach also avoids any account fees or annual
expenses that you would have in a CESA or Section 529 account, and,
like those accounts, investment earnings used for qualified-education
expenses are free of federal income taxes. (U.S. savings bonds have
always been exempt from state and local taxes.) Not all households
will qualify for the Savings Bonds for Education program. See the
Bureau
of Public Debt's Web page for the income restrictions.
There are some tax advantages to the CESA and Section
529 accounts. Qualified distributions from CESA and Section 529
accounts are free of federal taxation, and in many states are also
free of state income taxes, providing you invest in your home state's
college savings plan. The College
Savings Plans Network has a table that lays out the tax
treatment by state.
Contributions to Section 529 College Savings Plans
are made with after-tax dollars, but some states give you a tax
deduction for contributing to your home state's college savings
plan. Savingforcollege.com
reviews the plans by state and helps you decide whether you want
to invest in your home state's plan or to look elsewhere. Especially
helpful is that site's Section
529 Plan Evaluator and five-mortarboard rating system.
Of course, the key thing regardless of which type
of college investment account you choose is to get started. The
sooner you start investing for his college expenses, the easier
it will be to reach that financial goal.
-- Posted: Feb. 22, 2002
|