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What is a Coverdell Education Savings Account?
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| Guest post by: Jess Wells |
Article Overview: Everyone wants to be able to save money for their child’s education. A Coverdell Education Savings Account is a tax advantaged savings account that empowers your efforts, making more of your hard earned savings for your child’s education. Read on to learn more about a Coverdell Education Savings Account.
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What is a Coverdell Education Savings Account?
If you’re starting to plan for your
child’s education, and wondering about ways you could start saving for
college, then a Coverdell Education Savings Account might be a very good
option for you to look into. Basically, a Coverdell Education Savings
Account (ESA) is a tax advantaged investment account created as an
incentive to help parents and students save for education expenses.
Coverdell ESAs allow almost any investment inside including stocks,
bonds, and mutual funds, unlike similar “529 plans” which only allow a
choice among a number of state run allocation programs. Distributions
from a Coverdell Education Savings Account are tax-free as long as they
are used for qualified education expenses, such as tuition and fees,
required books, supplies and equipment and qualified expenses for room
and board.
GET A HEAD START ON SAVING FOR YOUR CHILD’S EDUCATION
If you want to open a Coverdell Education Savings Account, it’s a
good idea to start as early in the beneficiary’s life as possible to
reap the maximum benefit. Typically, a beneficiary of a Coverdell
Education Savings Account must be under age 18, or else is a special
needs beneficiary. The reason for opening an account as early in the
beneficiary’s life as possible is due to the fact that the total
contributions for the beneficiary of a Coverdell Education Savings
Account cannot be more than $2,000 in any one year, no matter how many
accounts have been established, so if you are in a position to start
investing in your child’s education now, you might as well get started
as early as possible.
NOT TAX DEDUCTABLE BUT NO TAXES ON DISTRUBUTIONS
Another important issue to consider is that contributions to a
Coverdell Education Savings Account are not deductible, however money
deposited in the account will grow tax free until it is distributed.
There is no tax on distributions if they are for enrollment or
attendance at an eligible educational institution. This benefit applies
to qualified higher education expenses, as well as to qualified
elementary and secondary education expenses. This includes any public,
private or religious school that provides elementary or secondary
education as determined under state law. Eligible institutions that can
be paid from a Coverdell Education Savings Account also include any
college, university, vocational school or other postsecondary
educational institution eligible to participate in a student aid program
administered by the Department of Education. Virtually all accredited
public, nonprofit, and proprietary (privately owned profit-making)
postsecondary institutions are eligible.
WHAT ARE THE LIMITS OF A COVERDELL EDUCATION SAVINGS ACCOUNT?
While a Coverdell Education Savings Account offers great potential to
save for your child’s education expenses, there are some limits to what
is possible that should be noted. For one, there are contribution limits
for taxpayers based on the contributor’s Modified Adjusted Gross
Income. Additionally, contributions to a Coverdell Education Savings
Account for a particular tax year may only be made until the due date of
the contributor’s return, without extensions.
If the distribution of a Coverdell Education Savings Account exceeds
qualified education expenses, a portion will be taxable to the
beneficiary and will usually be subject to an additional 10% tax.
Exceptions to the additional 10% tax include the death or disability of
the beneficiary or if the beneficiary receives a qualified scholarship.
Finally, if there is a balance in the Coverdell ESA when the
beneficiary reaches age 30, it must generally be distributed within 30
days. The portion of a Coverdell Education Savings Account representing
earnings on the account will be taxable and subject to the additional
10% tax. The beneficiary may avoid these taxes by rolling over the full
balance to another Coverdell Education Savings Account for another
family member.
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About the Author: Jess Wells RSS for Jess's articles - Visit Jess's website Jess Wells, Editorial Director of Cisco's Innovators Forum, and her team of guest bloggers interview experts, entrepreneurs and authors on how to run a small business better. To learn more about small business best practices and the technologies behind them, visit www.CiscoInnovators.com. Click here to visit Jess's website Delegating in a Distributed World New Demands on the CEO What is a Coverdell Education Savings Account Deciding Bewteen a Roth IRA Versus a Traditional IRA What is a SelfDirected IRA What The Obama Healthcare Proposal Means for Small Business |
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