1 / 13

An Overview of Section 529 Plans Douglas Chittenden VP Institutional Product Management TIAA-CREF

An Overview of Section 529 Plans Douglas Chittenden VP Institutional Product Management TIAA-CREF. Cost of Higher Education. *Source: Trends in College Pricing, published by the College Board FS-3. College Funding Opportunities. Qualified Tuition Programs – “529” Prepaid Tuition Plans

thalia
Télécharger la présentation

An Overview of Section 529 Plans Douglas Chittenden VP Institutional Product Management TIAA-CREF

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Overview of Section 529 Plans Douglas Chittenden VP Institutional Product Management TIAA-CREF

  2. Cost of Higher Education *Source: Trends in College Pricing, published by the College Board FS-3

  3. College Funding Opportunities Qualified Tuition Programs – “529” • Prepaid Tuition Plans • College Savings Plans

  4. Prepaid Tuition Plans • Allows for the purchase of future tuition at today’s prices. • Approx. 20 states operate pre-paid programs for public universities in those states. • Typically funds may be used tax-free for tuition and room and board. • A program for independent colleges and universities is available through the Tuition Plan Consortium with TIAA-CREF as the program manager.

  5. College Savings Plans • Federal tax deferred growth and federal tax free withdrawals for qualified higher education expenses • Some states offer additional state tax incentives • Funds can be used at any eligible school for tuition, fees, room and board, books, supplies and required equipment such as computers • No income limits for participation or benefits

  6. College Savings PlanProgram Design • Programs typically offer a range of investment options. • Aged based models • Asset based options, fixed income, equity • Fund specific options • Account owners can change options yearly • States set contribution maximums set to allow for full funding of four years of college

  7. College Savings Marketplace • 529 Assets have grown to over $90 Billion industry wide • Federal Tax Permanency enacted – “Sunset Provision” eliminated • Broker-Driven Growth, 70-80% of assets are invested through Advisors and Brokers • Confusing 529 Landscape • Pre-Paid vs. Savings vs. Other College Savings Options such as UGMA accounts • Large number of 529 programs to choose from

  8. College Savings Programs – Market Overview • Programs are maturing and assets are growing, driving down costs and leading to product innovation – affinity programs etc.. • State market is segmenting as larger states accumulate more assets • Industry Groups are Pushing for State Tax Equity – more attention to suitability

  9. Principles for Successful College Savings Strategy • Start Early and make continuous, on-going contributions • Typical Re-contribution Rate – 60% • Use a diversified portfolio of investments • Age Based Allocation Options typically hold 60% - 70% of program assets • Take advantage of federal and state based tax incentives • Minimize expenses

  10. Take Advantage of Tax Incentives * $6,000 invested each year for 15 years. 6% investment return. Account owner in 27% federal and 5% state income tax brackets. Beneficiary child is in the 10% federal and 5% state income tax bracket. 35% of proceeds are dividends taxed at 27% federal and 5% state income tax rates. 30% are short-term capital gains and 35% are deferred capital gains taxed at a 20% rate (10% for UGMA). FS-19

  11. Minimize Expenses Assumes a $10,000 deposit at birth and allowed to grow for 18 years in the same plan, with different annual asset-based fee charges . Assuming a 7% return.

  12. TIAA-CREF is program manager for 10 state programs TIAA-CREF – College Savings Programs

  13. TIAA-CREF College Savings Program - Independent College (I-529) Pre-Paid Program • I-529 program provides for the pre payment of tuition at Independent Colleges and Universities, it is operated by the Tuition Plan Consortium (TPC) • Approximately 275 Member Private Colleges and Universities, including Princeton, Stanford, University of Notre Dame and Johns Hopkins (new member.) • Pre-paid tuition can be applied to any member institution • If child does not attend member institution, account owner receives a refund with a nominal rate of investment return

More Related