Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love how OP is sleep deprived with a newbor …but I guess awake enough to ask how much money they can bleed from their parents.
Jeeezzz, she has a trust. Her parents plan to give her the money, she just is trying to figure out the best ways to do it for a kid. As posters have mentioned, there are many ways to pay direct for things and it's not considered a "Gift". hNW/UHNW families work hard to ensure they gift as much as possible while they are alive to reduce their estate tax amounts.
They also often smartly realize that the money has much more impact when kid/family is young than once the kid is 50 and grandkids are 20.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love how OP is sleep deprived with a newbor …but I guess awake enough to ask how much money they can bleed from their parents.
Jeeezzz, she has a trust. Her parents plan to give her the money, she just is trying to figure out the best ways to do it for a kid. As posters have mentioned, there are many ways to pay direct for things and it's not considered a "Gift". hNW/UHNW families work hard to ensure they gift as much as possible while they are alive to reduce their estate tax amounts.
They also often smartly realize that the money has much more impact when kid/family is young than once the kid is 50 and grandkids are 20.
Anonymous wrote:So much misinformation in this thread.
Payments made to schools are not gifts — but daycare and summer camp are not schools.
Yes you can advance fund a 529 with 5 years contributions but then you cannot give further gifts to that person for 5 years without filing a gift tax return.
Really though if your parents are well off and looking to help you don’t need to worry about any of this. If your parents are paying for college it doesn’t really matter if they cash flow it or use a 529.
Anonymous wrote:Love how OP is sleep deprived with a newbor …but I guess awake enough to ask how much money they can bleed from their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Seems like they have quite a lot of money. There is no reason to complicate you all's life opening new accounts. If any, learn how they got it and simply continue to invest/preserve the money.
They can continue to give money away to you and siblings and you all will do great.
Zero reason for 529. It's for the company holding it to make money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids are set for life with no tax planning at all. Unclench and try contributing to society.
Envy is unbecoming. If you can’t contribute, you can keep scrolling. (Not OP.)
Anonymous wrote:The limit for exempted gifts is $36k this year (from both grandparents to grandchild). You also didn't mention if your parents gift to your spouse as well as you (you just mentioned your trust). Assuming they don't already gift to your husband, they could do 5 years' worth of gifting to your spouse, $160k, and that money could go into the 529 on day 1. Then, they can still gift $36k per year for daycare until the child goes to PreK, and then beyond that keep gifting the child the max for a brokerage or savings account or to cover expenses, etc. Then they could just keep doing this in addition to paying for school once PreK starts. In 5 years, they can superfund the 529 w/ a second gift to your husband too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. My understanding is that grandparents paying for daycare is not tax advantaged in the same way that paying directly for pre K and up is unless it’s part of the $32,000 they can gift her generally. Am I wrong on that? She’d be starting at 1 year old due to maternity and paternity leave. Thanks for the great ideas, I didn’t even think of summer camp!
The $34k (per couple to a single person) gift "limit" is just the maximum amount you can give without reporting it. You can give someone over that amount in a year, you just have to report it and start tracking to ensure it doesn't go above the total lifetime exclusion ($13 million right now). So even if a certain payment/tuition counts as a gift, they can give large amounts and not be taxed. They just have to start reporting it.
https://www.nerdwallet.com/article/taxes/gift-tax-rate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:they can open a 529 for college savings (this is separate from your 529)
Totally this. You can use it to pay for school at any level now, I am pretty sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm lucky in that my parents are well off. I'm not sure how much money they have but I know they have planned for paying the estate tax so it's above that amount. I just had a child, my parents' first and possibly only grandchild, and my father would like to discuss what he can do for his grandchild financially. I'm sure he already has a plan, but before we talk I'd like to have some idea of options. It's just hard for me to research right now because I'm very sleep deprived with a newborn! He gives my siblings and me the annual gift tax exclusion amount in a trust so I assume my child would get that as well. I also know grandparents can my for their grandchildren's school directly and not have to worry about estate tax. What about daycare? Anything else? I've also received quite a few checks from family for my child and I need to figure out what sort of account to set up for her to deposit them. Please help out a sleep deprived new mother! TIA.
start funding their ROTH ira early
Anonymous wrote:So much misinformation in this thread.
Payments made to schools are not gifts — but daycare and summer camp are not schools.
Yes you can advance fund a 529 with 5 years contributions but then you cannot give further gifts to that person for 5 years without filing a gift tax return.
Really though if your parents are well off and looking to help you don’t need to worry about any of this. If your parents are paying for college it doesn’t really matter if they cash flow it or use a 529.