Anonymous wrote:You can transfer funds between 529's once a year
I don't look only at performance, but at expenses
DC's plan has an expense ratios up to 2%, some plans are 0.3% or even less
When I put money aside for college, I'm less concerned with the immediate tax break, and more concerned with just how much money will be there when college tuition comes due. Perhaps this isn't the right way to look at it? I have been thinking that Calvert might show a 5yr 12% annual growth for the fund but took 5x2% over that time, where vanguard might show a 5yr 12% annual growth but only took 5x0.28% during that time, leaving me with 8% more to spend
Anonymous wrote:DC 529 was #1 ranked last year.
http://www.savingforcollege.com/articles/2013-plan-performance-rankings-q2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I want to switch my investments out of DC's 529 to that of another state or vanguard, is there a holding period requirement, or can I do so immediately?
Tia
You can do it immediately to another state plan. All 529 plans are run by states. You cannot go directly to Vanguard. Quite a few states use Vanguard funds including Utah & Nebraska.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can open account in DC, take the state tax deduction, then transfer to another state's 529. I'm a financial advisor and we recommend the Utah plan to many clients.
Are there fees or penalties for that? How soon do you have to transfer it?
Anonymous wrote:You can open account in DC, take the state tax deduction, then transfer to another state's 529. I'm a financial advisor and we recommend the Utah plan to many clients.