Attention retirement savers: college 529 plans aren't
just for kids
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[August 09, 2018]
By Gail MarksJarvis
CHICAGO (Reuters) - As a financial planner,
Ray Loewe watched clients who had retired struggle with too much leisure
time.
“Playing golf six days a week gets boring,” Loewe said.
He vowed that when he retired he and his wife would travel and take
college classes. To put his plan into action, Loewe took advantage of a
savings tool typically used by parents and grandparents to stash money
away for college for children - the 529 college savings plan. He opened
one for himself.
When he retired from his planning business in his 60s, Loewe and his
wife, Sandy, studied ecology and leather back turtles through a New
Jersey community college course taught completely on the ground in Costa
Rica. They tapped $25,000 in 529 savings to pay the bill.
Loewe, whose financial planning business in New Jersey focused on paying
for college, was ahead of his time. A decade later, more financial
planners are directing retirement-focused clients into 529 plans,
experts say.
The number is still small, however. Only 2 percent of 529 plans list
people over 21 as beneficiaries, according to Paul Curley, director of
college saving research at Strategic Insight.
If you are interested in using a 529 for your retirement consider the
following:
START EARLY
A 529 college savings plan offers powerful advantages over savings or
brokerage accounts because contributions grow tax-free year after year.
Then, when you tap a 529 to pay for a college or technical education,
your withdrawals are not taxed. You may also get a state tax deduction
each year for your contribution.
Harness the power of compounding as early as possible by opening a 529
for yourself in your 40s or 50s, not in your 60s.
You may also be able to tap into savings intended for other family
members. After putting her career on hold while raising five children
and sending them to college with 529 savings, Laurie Alter, 60, plans go
to law school next year. She will use leftover 529 money to help pay the
bill.
“My father was a lawyer and a judge and I loved listening to him talk
about the law,” said Alter, of Flagler Beach, Florida.
Alter’s financial planner helped her switch the beneficiary from her
son's 529 plan to her own name. A 529 must be in a student’s name when
he or she goes to college or a technical college.
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A tourist sunbathes on a rock at the beach at Manuel Antonio
National Park in Quepos, 157 km (98 miles) off San Jose, July 30,
2012. REUTERS/Juan Carlos Ulate
KNOW THE RULES
It is not necessary to get a degree, but students must enroll in classes for
credit or be part of a technical certificate program at eligible educational
institutions to use 529 funds without penalty.
You can check colleges at https://fafsa.ed.gov/
FAFSA/app/schoolSearch
Money taken from a 529 plan for an unqualified expense will be taxed, as well as
hit with a 10 percent penalty. Airfare, for instance, is typically not covered.
And a student must be enrolled at least half time to cover housing, said Deborah
Goodkin, managing director of NEST 529 College Savings Plans.
RETIREMENT PLANNING
A 529 is also a smart retirement planning tool that would-be students can use to
minimize taxes and make retirement savings last, said Jeremy Hopkins, an
American College of Financial Services professor.
If a retiree pulls money from a traditional individual retirement account (IRA)
to pay for a college course, that money will be taxed. Possible results: A
greater portion of a person’s Social Security could end up being taxed and
Medicare premiums could rise for high-income retirees.
A Roth IRA could be used to pay for retirement college courses without being
taxed, but Hopkins suggested reserving a Roth for other expenses. His advice:
While working, contribute the maximum possible to a Roth IRA and a
healt06:00:00h savings account before starting a 529 for yourself.
Loewe, aware of the Internal Revenue Service's 529 requirements, designed the
Costa Rica course himself to include travel and convinced Salem Community
College in New Jersey to offer it for four credits.
Still, Loewe's advice is to find existing college courses because it is tough to
get a college to start a class for retirees.
(Editing by Lauren Young and Steve Orlofsky)
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