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The ABC's Of Education Planning
by Greg Hilton
MFI Correspondent
Education
beyond high school is an expensive proposition, and fewer than one-third of
students receive any form of financial aid. Your college bound child will expect
and need help from you to get that educational advantage in life.
Parents have, most often, waited until their kids
registered for the SAT test before giving thought to financing this education.
Now there seems to be a general interest in planning when the kids are in grade
school, or earlier. Whether you are a parent planning for the higher education
of your children or an adult planning your own advanced education, you will want
to think through the best ways to finance that education and to make the most of
the opportunities open to you.
Help from the Tax Code
Realizing that parents are not always ahead of the college
saving curve, the federal government has installed some tax-favored ways to
save.
Tax Credits. Congress gives us the Hope Scholarship Credit
and the Lifetime Learning Credit for college expenses incurred and paid after
1997. The Hope Credit is equal to 100% of the first $1,000 and 50% of the next
$1,000 of qualified expenses (max. credit $1,500). This credit can be claimed
for every student, in a degree program, who has not completed the first two
years of post-secondary education (i.e., freshmen and sophomores). The Lifetime
Learning Credit is equal to 20% of the first $5,000 of any educational expenses
(max. credit = $1,000). These credits can be a big help but they are subject to
limitations:
qualified expenses only include tuition and enrollment
fees, not room and board;
the education can be for the taxpayer, spouse, or child,
but the child must be a dependent on the return; and
the credits are phased out for taxpayers with gross
incomes between $40,000 and $50,000 ($80,000 and $100,000 for married
couples).
The Education IRA. If you qualify, you can put up to $500
every year in an IRA opened for a child under 18. You cannot deduct your
contribution, but the earnings are entirely tax free if used for higher
education. If the child does not use the money for school, the account can be
transferred to another one of your children or grandchildren. Their drawbacks
include:
a phase out for taxpayers with gross income greater than
$95,000 ($150,000 for married couples);
distributions are taxable to the extent they exceed
qualified higher education expenses (including room and board) and, if
taxable, are subject to a 10% penalty;
assets must be withdrawn and included in income when the
beneficiary dies or turns age 30; and
only $500 can be contributed annually!
Regular IRA and Roth IRA Withdrawals. A recent major tax
code revision allows withdrawals from regular and Roth IRAs to pay for college
expenses for yourself, your spouse, a child, or grandchild. The withdrawals will
be subject to regular income tax but not the 10% early withdrawal penalty.
Qualified expenses include tuition, books, and fees, but not room and board.
EE Savings Bonds. Series EE savings bonds are perhaps the
best investment for that crucial four years before tuition is due. Taxes on the
interest are deferred until paid out, and then they are only subject to federal
tax, not state or local taxes. The interest escapes tax altogether if you bought
the EE bond after January 1, 1990, were at least 24 years old at the time, and
you redeem the bonds in a year when you, your spouse or your child paid tuition.
The rate on series EEs is attractive as well—90% of the rate on 5-year
Treasury securities. Qualified expenses include tuition (but not room and
board), contributions to education IRAs and qualified state tuition plans. The
exclusion of interest is subject to phase out for taxpayers with gross incomes
over $53,100 ($79,650 for married couples filing jointly).
Qualified State Tuition Programs: Several states and
colleges have education prepayment plans. Parents or grandparents put up money
for a particular child. The state, or college, guarantees that this sum will
cover a fixed portion of the tuition or certain number of college credits when
the child goes to school. No matter how fast tuition might rise, the prepayment
covers the agreed amount of education. Drawbacks include:
there is no guarantee that your child will be
accepted or want to attend the institution;
the difference between what you pay in and the value
of the education you receive will be taxed as capital gain;
these programs only cover tuition, not room and
board.
Ownership Issues
College savings can be accumulated in either your own name
or your child's. The Uniform Transfers (or in some states, Gifts) to Minors Act
makes giving to a child quick and easy. There are good reasons, however, that
make it a better course of action to keep the money in your own name. First,
there is little benefit under current tax law. There is not a great tax rate
differential and the kiddie-tax imposes your tax rate on all but the first $1300
of income for less than 14 year olds. Second, kids take control of their money
at age 18 and you cannot stop them (short of parental influence) from buying a
car with it. Finally, saving in the child's name hurts his or her ability to
qualify for college financial aid.
Allocating Your Assets
Once you are convinced of the need for college planning,
you need to understand the investment vehicles that are best to finance the
plan. If you are starting early—your child is in junior high or younger—you
can afford to be a little more aggressive and invest in things like stock mutual
funds. You have enough time to ride out ups and downs in the stock market.
Stock-owning mutual funds have averaged 10 to 12 percent annually on money
invested for at least a decade. Since college costs are inflating at about 5%,
college for stock buyers gets cheaper over time because their investments are
rising faster than tuition.
As the tuition bills get closer (within four years) you
want to start shifting your investments from more aggressive vehicles, like
stocks, toward less volatile investments, like bonds. As you get close to
needing the money, you do not want to run the risk of having to withdraw it at a
market bottom. If you do not start saving until your children are older, the
money should be kept in investments that are absolutely safe.
Gregory Hilton, J.D., LLM (tax), CPA, CFP is a
Fee-Only® financial planner in Chicago. Although his services are comprehensive
he concentrates on the tax and investment issues of retirement and estate
planning. He is registered as an investment advisor and maintains membership in
NAPFA, ICFP, and several legal, tax and accounting associations. Greg is a
national instructor on tax and financial issues for the National Association of
Tax Practitioners and is authoring a book on financial planning for the highly
compensated to be published by Commerce Clearing House.
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