Anonymous wrote:Well for one thing you would pay capital gains taxes on a distribution from a regular brokerage account.
The state income tax deduction is worth a little but the tax-free growth and withdrawal (for qualifying expenses) is the main feature.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me the point of a 529? I know that you can write it off in state taxes, but beyond that what are the benefits? It seems to me that investing that money in a standard stock account is much more preferable as you can control your portfolio and get much higher gains. I’m a MD resident. Can someone explain why I should choose a 529 over a stick account?
You can invest in a pretty wide range of options in the T Rowe Plan.
Just invest it aggressively. No one is stoping you.
It grows tax deferred for 18+ years which is significant if you are a high income earner with a large balance.
+1
Pick a more aggressive investment choices within your plan, or switch plans to one with more choices. Key benefits is that it grows tax free---you do not pay any cap gains while it grows or when withdrawing for "educational purposes". You can also withdraw tax free if your kid gets merit awards and you don't need it, you can only withdraw the amount matching the merit awards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me the point of a 529? I know that you can write it off in state taxes, but beyond that what are the benefits? It seems to me that investing that money in a standard stock account is much more preferable as you can control your portfolio and get much higher gains. I’m a MD resident. Can someone explain why I should choose a 529 over a stick account?
You can invest in a pretty wide range of options in the T Rowe Plan.
Just invest it aggressively. No one is stoping you.
It grows tax deferred for 18+ years which is significant if you are a high income earner with a large balance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, put it into the MD global equity fund. Lowest fees and highest average returns out of the MD 529 funds. I’ve averaged 12% over the last 13 years.
Thanks! I’m currently in a plan managed by Fidelity. Does anyone have recs for a Fidelity plan?
Anonymous wrote:Op, put it into the MD global equity fund. Lowest fees and highest average returns out of the MD 529 funds. I’ve averaged 12% over the last 13 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well for one thing you would pay capital gains taxes on a distribution from a regular brokerage account.
The state income tax deduction is worth a little but the tax-free growth and withdrawal (for qualifying expenses) is the main feature.
OP here. So I’ve been saving in a 529 for a couple of years and the gains are small. I believe 4% total in two years. Seems to me I could’ve made out better with standard account, those have an 18% return for me over same period. I would’ve made more even when paying capital gains tax. Am I missing something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well for one thing you would pay capital gains taxes on a distribution from a regular brokerage account.
The state income tax deduction is worth a little but the tax-free growth and withdrawal (for qualifying expenses) is the main feature.
OP here. So I’ve been saving in a 529 for a couple of years and the gains are small. I believe 4% total in two years. Seems to me I could’ve made out better with standard account, those have an 18% return for me over same period. I would’ve made more even when paying capital gains tax. Am I missing something?
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me the point of a 529? I know that you can write it off in state taxes, but beyond that what are the benefits? It seems to me that investing that money in a standard stock account is much more preferable as you can control your portfolio and get much higher gains. I’m a MD resident. Can someone explain why I should choose a 529 over a stick account?
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me the point of a 529? I know that you can write it off in state taxes, but beyond that what are the benefits? It seems to me that investing that money in a standard stock account is much more preferable as you can control your portfolio and get much higher gains. I’m a MD resident. Can someone explain why I should choose a 529 over a stick account?
Anonymous wrote:Well for one thing you would pay capital gains taxes on a distribution from a regular brokerage account.
The state income tax deduction is worth a little but the tax-free growth and withdrawal (for qualifying expenses) is the main feature.