locate an office

offices near you

office near you

Education

Funding a child’s education? Know your options

May 16, 2023

529 accounts are most popular because they offer excellent tax advantages. But irrevocable trusts provide the greatest flexibility. What’s right for your family?

In the United States, even if you’re wealthy, you may fret about how best to fund your children’s education. That’s unsurprising, given that costs can run as high as $85,000 a year per child at some of the nation’s most expensive high schools and colleges.

Fortunately, there are several ways U.S. taxpayers might organize their finances to most economically foot these hefty bills.1

The simplest and, as it happens, most tax-efficient way to provide for your children’s education is to pay as you go. Unfortunately, this approach is also the riskiest: No one can say what obstacles might arise before you’re finished paying for schooling.

However, there are three ways to set aside money to help you better ensure funds will be available to support your children’s education: a 529 account, an irrevocable trust for the benefit of the child 2 and a Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA) account. All three are a form of forced savings—a parent, grandparent or another relative creates an account for a child’s benefit and contributes to it, whether all at once or over the years. That fund, and its earnings, can grow over time and become a pool of wealth that the family draws on to pay the educational expenses.

Which option is right for you and your family? This article can help you decide.

We find that Private Bank clients favor trusts and 529 accounts over UTMA accounts. Many dislike the potential for UTMA assets to wind up in the hands of a young adult. With UTMA accounts, the child generally gains complete control of all the assets at age 21. 

As for 529 accounts and irrevocable trusts, we find that clients with the largest fortunes tend to choose trusts to fund their children’s education, while those with slightly less tend to rely on 529s. Some (at all wealth levels) use both. Here’s why:

An irrevocable trust is costly but also the most flexible. To set up and manage a trust properly, you should have an estate planning lawyer draft the trust document, then hire a trustee to administer and invest the trust assets.

The reasons people go through the effort and expense of irrevocable trusts are clear:

  • Trusts may grow and last—Trusts can grow to whatever size their investment performance allows. By contrast, legal constraints limit how much can be contributed to a 529 account, thus limiting an account’s growth potential. An irrevocable trust also can continue to benefit the child for years, even for the child’s entire life (as long as the trust agreement so provides). Trust assets will be excluded from the donor’s estate
  • Trust assets might be used for many purposes—Trust assets can be used for any purpose, even those having nothing to do with education (as long as the trust agreement so provides)
  • Trusts can help you transfer wealth to the next generation—The income generated by an irrevocable trust is subject to income tax, but your trust agreement could stipulate that you (as the grantor) will pay those taxes as long as you live. That way, the trust assets grow free of income taxes, and you transfer more money out of your estate free of estate taxes


Given all the advantages of a trust, why would a parent with great wealth opt for a 529 when the funds in those accounts can only be used for education?

The answer is that 529 accounts can be easily established and managed, and—most importantly—they offer superior tax advantages:

  • They’re tax-free—So long as its funds are used for educational expenses, no taxes are paid on either 529 account funds’ earnings or distributions for the child’s benefit, and the assets are excluded from the grantor’s estate (as long as the grantor outlives any “superfunded” period)
  • Contributions are potentially deductible—Many states allow donors to deduct, against their state income taxes, contributions made to 529 accounts administered by the state of which there are a resident
  • They offer “superfundability”—Donors can, if they like, contribute five years’ worth of their annual exclusion gifts to as many 529 accounts for different children as they like without using any of their lifetime gift tax exclusion (which in 2023 is $12.92 million)

    In 2023, that would be five times the $17,000 annual gift exclusion, for a total of $85,000 (or $170,000 for a married couple) to each 529 account. Say, for example, you have three children: You could contribute a total of $255,000 (or $510,000, if married) to your children’s education free of gift taxes this year.

The 529’s super funding ability—unique in U.S. tax law—is evidence of Congress’s desire to make it easier for parents to save for their children’s education, and a recent legislative development underscores Congress’s bias in favor of 529 accounts. The so-called SECURE Act 2.0 3 has a measure designed to fix a problem that has been growing since the law creating 529s was enacted in 1997. Many families overfunded 529 accounts and were left with tax problems after the beneficiaries (and other family members) had completed their educations.

Before the SECURE Act 2.0, there would be either income or gift tax consequences, perhaps to the parents or perhaps to the children, once any funds not used for the children’s education left the account. But now, thanks to the SECURE Act 2.0, the beneficiary of an overfunded 529 account can, without tax consequences, put up to $35,000 during their lifetime of the extra funds into a Roth IRA.4

What’s best for you and your family depends on many factors, including your balance sheet, the nature of your income stream and portfolio, other family members’ potential contributions—and your children’s aspirations.

Whether your child is newborn or about to enter college, or even graduate school, your J.P. Morgan advisor can help you and your tax advisors select the education funding solution that suits you.

1Jami Farkas, “Here are the 15 most expensive high schools in America,” gobankingrates.com, August 17, 2022. Robert Farrington, “20 most expensive colleges in 2023,” The College Investor, February 27, 2023.

2The trust must be “irrevocable”—meaning that the grantor has given the funds away and cannot reclaim them—to maximize the estate and gift tax benefits of the trust, as well as to prevent the grantor from being tempted to reclaim the funds.

3The law is formally entitled H.R.2954—Securing a Strong Retirement Act of 2021.

4The annual contribution cap for Roth IRAs is $6,500–$7,500 if the taxpayer is at least 50.

Contact us to discuss how we can help you experience the full possibility of your wealth.

Please tell us about yourself, and our team will contact you. 

*Required Fields

Contact us to discuss how we can help you experience the full possibility of your wealth.

Please tell us about yourself, and our team will contact you. 

Enter your First Name

> or < are not allowed

Only 40 characters allowed

Enter your Last Name

> or < are not allowed

Only 40 characters allowed

Select your country of residence

Enter valid street address

> or < are not allowed

Only 150 characters allowed

Enter your city

> or < are not allowed

Only 35 characters allowed

Select your state

> or < are not allowed

Enter your ZIP code

Please Enter a valid Zip Code

> or < are not allowed

Only 10 characters allowed

Enter your postal code

Please Enter a valid Zip Code

> or < are not allowed

Only 10 characters allowed

Enter your phone number

Please enter a valid phone number

Tell Us More About You

0/1000

Only 1000 characters allowed

> or < are not allowed

Checkbox is not selected

Your Recent History

LEARN MORE About Our Firm and Investment Professionals Through FINRA BrokerCheck

 

To learn more about J.P. Morgan’s investment business, including our accounts, products and services, as well as our relationship with you, please review our J.P. Morgan Securities LLC Form CRS and Guide to Investment Services and Brokerage Products

 

JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. and its affiliates (collectively "JPMCB") offer investment products, which may include bank-managed accounts and custody, as part of its trust and fiduciary services. Other investment products and services, such as brokerage and advisory accounts, are offered through J.P. Morgan Securities LLC ("JPMS"), a member of FINRA and SIPC. Insurance products are made available through Chase Insurance Agency, Inc. (CIA), a licensed insurance agency, doing business as Chase Insurance Agency Services, Inc. in Florida. JPMCB, JPMS and CIA are affiliated companies under the common control of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Products not available in all states.

 

Please read the Legal Disclaimer for key important J.P. Morgan Private Bank information in conjunction with these pages.

INVESTMENT AND INSURANCE PRODUCTS ARE: • NOT FDIC INSURED • NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY • NOT A DEPOSIT OR OTHER OBLIGATION OF, OR GUARANTEED BY, JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A. OR ANY OF ITS AFFILIATES • SUBJECT TO INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE LOSS OF THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED

Bank deposit products, such as checking, savings and bank lending and related services are offered by JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. Member FDIC.

Not a commitment to lend. All extensions of credit are subject to credit approval.

Equal Housing Lender Icon