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Saving for College is Getting Easier

By Bob Moeller
WEAC Member Benefits

December 2001

Financial Planning Seminars
Achieving Financial Independence

It is time to review the best way to fund your own future college education or that of your child or your grandchild. The new tax law just put into place significantly changes the “funding future education costs” outlook. Because of this, financial advisers are leaping into the fray, eager to make their 3½% or equivalent of everything you invest by “advising” you. But you can easily do it yourself for free. So let’s save that 3½% for your college education fund.

The Section 529 program in Wisconsin is named EdVest, and in order to save the commissions, you must deal directly with the Strong funds, not through your friendly financial advisor. You or others (grandparents, etc.) can set money aside to fund future college costs for you or your children and invest it with a great no-load, no sales charge, mutual fund family – the Strong Funds of Milwaukee. The availability of the Strong Funds is fairly recent and is a really great improvement. Add to that the major change in the new tax law for 2002 – funds invested grow with no taxes and then when withdrawn for college expenses there are no longer any federal or state income taxes to pay on the growth! Plus, applicable for 2001 and future years, add this clincher – any money you invest for your own children up to $3,000 per child per year is tax deductible on yourWisconsin income taxes. Imagine these examples:

  • You graduate, start working, put money in EdVest to fund your master’s degree. You intend to start immediately on it (of course) but it will take a few years. You invest conservatively, start using the funds in two years, and any growth is totally tax-free.
  • Your mother wants to start a little fund for her new grandchild to go to college. EdVest will work better than I-bonds, E-bonds, etc. The funds may be invested more aggressively, and 18 years later a lot is available with no taxes due. Grandma can contribute up to $50,000 into the fund for each child with no gift taxes. (Effectively she is using five years’ worth of the normal $10,000 per-year gift limit.)

What if the college attended is in Texas? No problem. What if the child doesn’t go to college? No problem, the funds can be shifted to another child, left to sit there invested in case the child changes his or her mind, or even withdrawn by you and spent on non-educational expenses, albeit with taxes and a tax penalty.

If interested, contact EdVest / Strong Funds at 1-888-338-3789. Tell them what you want to accomplish, and they will send you information and help you with any problems you have. They do not give investment advice, but your choices are listed below. You can open more than one account for a person and have different investment choices in those accounts. You can change your investment choices once per year.

Your choices are:

  1. Aggressive portfolio
  2. Moderate portfolio
  3. Balanced portfolio
  4. Index portfolio (100% in the S&P 500 index)
  5. Bond portfolio

Or, you can choose the age-based option that will automatically change investments as the child nears college.

Total possibilities are:

  • 10+ years until college (aggressive)
  • 7 to 9 years until college (moderate)
  • 3 to 6 years until college (balanced)
  • Less than 3 years (bond)

You can set up different accounts with separate deposits and effectively have more than one option. Or, if you select the age-based option, the investments automatically change.

In my opinion, the Section 529 plan, now that the federal taxation of future growth has been eliminated, is the best choice for your children’s college fund. Incidentally, if you have really rich grandparents involved, the maximum contribution is up to $246,000, presumably based on typical costs at an expensive private school like Harvard. Note you can make periodic contributions such as once a year in order to get the tax write-off.

Grandparents cannot get the tax write-off, only parents. One way to deal with grandparents’ contributions is for the grandparents to give money to the parents and parents deposit it into the EdVest Wisconsin Program. Again, up to $3,000 per child per year may be deducted from state taxes if done this way.

Posted December 4, 2001

Education News