900 N. Kings Highway, Cherry Hill, New Jersey 08034
856.667.4100
· 215.563.0276 · Fax: 856.667.3652


Weekly Tax Tips

Tax Tip - September 1st, 2008

Archives

View past Tax Tips:

View past Money Management articles:


2008 · 2007

2006
· 2005

2004 · 2003

2002 · 2001

2000 · 1999
 

Other Tips

Business Tips

Financial Planning Tips

Money Management

Online Advisor

Search

Looking for something specific? Enter one or more keywords and search our entire site.

Know the terms for making tax-free withdrawals from Section 529 plans

As the fall semester approaches, you might be thinking of tapping into your Section 529 college savings plan.

Before you do, you may want to consider four terms that can affect the taxability of withdrawals.

Qualified distributions of contributions and plan earnings are tax-free, as long as you use withdrawn amounts to pay qualified higher education expenses.

Tip: A 2006 tax law made this tax-free status permanent.


Qualified higher education expenses include your out-of-pocket expenses for tuition, fees, books, supplies, and equipment required for enrollment or attendance at an eligible educational institution. Also included is a limited, reasonable amount of room and board costs when you attend at least half-time (defined as half the school's standard full-time course load).

Expenses for special-needs services in connection with enrollment or attendance qualify too.


As a general rule, an eligible educational institution is a college, university, graduate, technical or vocational school. The school must be able to participate in U.S. Department of Education student financial aid programs.

The official definition: An accredited postsecondary educational institution in the U.S. or abroad that offers credit toward an associate's, bachelor's, graduate level or professional degree, or another recognized postsecondary credential.


A 10% additional tax applies to the earnings portion of distributions that fail to meet the tax-free criteria — unless an exception applies. Exceptions include withdrawals in cases of a beneficiary's death, disability or attendance at specified military schools, and certain rollovers or transfers to other 529 plans.

Note: Federal and state income taxes are also assessed on non-qualified withdrawals.
Please call us for more information, including the most tax-efficient way to direct distributions from your 529 plan and how the money you withdraw interacts with educational tax credits and amounts taken from other tax-advantaged accounts.

Some states offer favorable tax treatment to their residents only if they invest in the state's own Section 529 plan. You should consult your tax advisor regarding the consequences of any investment in a Section 529 plan. *Qualified withdrawals made after January 1, 2002 are free from federal income tax. The provisions of the Economic Growth and tax relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 will expire on December 31, 2010. Unless Congress tax action, earning withdrawn from a 529 plan account after 2010 to pay for qualified higher education expenses will be subject to federal income tax.*

[Business Information] [Home]

 
 

untitled

This site designed and maintained by the Information Technology experts at Alloy, Silverstein, Shapiro, Adams, Mulford, Cicalese, Wilson & Co.

We appreciate comments concerning our website. Contact our webmaster .