Anonymous wrote:In Virginia the law is that you can deduct up to $4,000 per account per year. The thing is each child / parent combination is a separate account and each investment option is a separate account. For example you could do the following:
1) Mom contributes to Child #1 account $4,000 and invests in total bond fund
2 ) Mom contributes to Child #1 account $4,000 and invests in total stock market
3) Mom contributes to Child #2 account $4,000 and invests in total bond fund
4) Mom contributes to Child #2 account $4,000 and invests in total stock market
5) Dad contributes to Child #1 account $4,000 and invests in total bond fund
6) Dad contributes to Child #1 account $4,000 and invests in total stock market
7) Dad contributes to Child #2 account $4,000 and invests in total bond fund
8) Dad contributes to Child #2 account $4,000 and invests in total stock market
and deduct $32,000 in a single year. If you wanted to add more investment options you could deduct even more.
Anonymous wrote:You can contibute more than 4k/year but you only get a tax deduction for 4k/yr. Contributions over 4k have an unlimited carryforward until all contributions have been deducted.
The College America plan can only be set-up through a financial advisor so you need to take into account additional fees that the advisor will charge on top of the standard 529 plan fees. You cannot set-up this type of plan on your own. The VEST or Prepaid plans you ca set-up on your own without advisors.
Anonymous wrote:You can contibute more than 4k/year but you only get a tax deduction for 4k/yr. Contributions over 4k have an unlimited carryforward until all contributions have been deducted.
The College America plan can only be set-up through a financial advisor so you need to take into account additional fees that the advisor will charge on top of the standard 529 plan fees. You cannot set-up this type of plan on your own. The VEST or Prepaid plans you ca set-up on your own without advisors.
Anonymous wrote:VA's 529 plan, the Virginia Education Savings Trust (VEST), is always one of the top rated plans based on investment returns and low fees. As a VA resident you will receive a state tax deduction for contributions up to 4k per account. You can set up the accounts and fund them electronically online. The aged based investment options are based on your child's age and years until they will be expected to withdraw the funds for college. The investments will automatically adjust over time from a more aggressive higher stock investment allocation to a more conservative allocation as they get closer to college age. So you don't have to reallocate the accounts on an annual basis.
I work for a financial firm and we ran the numbers just recently for a newborn who is expected to go to a state school (current tuition of 17k/yr). We inflated the current tuition cost by 6% and assumed an investment teturn of 8%. Based on these assumptions the $ amount needed by the time they enter college is $230,000. To reach this goal the parents will need to contribute $400/month until the age of 18.
You can use the VA 529 plan funds for out of state schools and some international schools as well but the tuition will most likely be significantly higher.
Anonymous wrote:OP, where do you live? You need to consider any tax breaks you may receive in your state for using their plan.
We use the VA VEST 529 and have been pretty pleased so far.