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ABLE Accounts: New Rules, Powerful Planning Opportunities for Special Needs Families
Guest Expert: Chris Hunter, Bette Ann Mobley, and Alisa Ferguson
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Attendee's Excellent Rating: 96%
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ABLE Accounts: New Rules & Powerful Planning Opportunities for Special Needs Families


1. What ABLE Accounts Are—and Why They Matter

ABLE accounts (“Achieving a Better Life Experience”) are tax-advantaged savings accounts for individuals with disabilities that allow them to:

  • Save and invest money
  • Maintain eligibility for means-tested benefits like:
    • Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
    • Medicaid
    • SNAP and housing assistance 

Key problem they solve:

  • Individuals on SSI are typically limited to $2,000 in assets
  • This historically forced “spend down” behavior 

ABLE accounts break that cycle by allowing meaningful savings without losing benefits 


2. Growth and Adoption of ABLE Accounts

As of December 2025:

  • 234,000+ ABLE accounts nationwide
  • $3+ billion in total assets
  • Average account balance: ~$13,000

This represents a major shift from near-zero savings capacity for many individuals with disabilities 


3. Major New Rule: Expanded Eligibility (2026)

Age Adjustment Act (Effective January 1, 2026)

  • Prior rule: Disability onset before age 26
  • New rule: Disability onset before age 46

This significantly expands eligibility to include:

  • Veterans with service-related disabilities
  • Individuals with:
    • Multiple sclerosis (MS)
    • ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease)
    • Progressive vision loss
    • Traumatic brain injuries 

Important nuance:

  • The onset must occur before age 46
  • The individual can open/use an account at any age afterward 

4. Key Contribution Rules (2026)

Standard Contribution Limit

  • $20,000 annually (indexed to inflation) 

Additional Contributions (ABLE to Work)

If the beneficiary is employed:

  • Can contribute above $20,000
  • Additional limit = lesser of:
    • Earned income, OR
    • Federal poverty level (~$15,650 for most states) 

Lifetime Account Limits

  • Typically $300,000–$500,000+ depending on the state
  • Based on each state’s 529 plan limits 

5. Tax Advantages

  • Contributions: Not federally deductible
  • Earnings: Grow tax-deferred
  • Withdrawals: Tax-free if used for qualified disability expenses 

Some states offer state income tax deductions for contributions 


6. Qualified Disability Expenses (QDEs)

The IRS intentionally defines QDEs very broadly.

Two key tests:

  1. Does it relate to the disability?
  2. Does it improve health, independence, or quality of life? 

Common categories:

  • Housing (rent, utilities)
  • Education
  • Transportation
  • Healthcare and therapies
  • Assistive technology
  • Food and daily living expenses 

Real-world examples:

  • Service animal care
  • Travel for Special Olympics
  • Smartphones and internet
  • Therapy (e.g., equine or music therapy)  

There is no exhaustive list, by design 


7. Flexibility: Getting Money In and Out

Funding options:

  • Bank transfers (one-time or recurring)
  • Payroll deposits
  • Social Security direct deposit
  • Gifts from family/friends
  • 529 plan rollovers (tax-free, up to annual limits) 

Spending access:

  • Debit/prepaid cards
  • Checks
  • Bank transfers
  • Bill pay systems 

Key rule:

  • If funds leave the ABLE account, they must generally be used for QDEs
  • Improper use can trigger taxes/penalties 

8. ABLE vs. Special Needs Trusts (SNTs)

Key Differences

FeatureABLE AccountSpecial Needs Trust
OwnershipBeneficiary owns accountTrustee controls
CostLowHigher (legal/admin fees)
AccessImmediate, flexibleControlled, slower
Contribution limitsYesNo practical limit
Daily spendingEasy (cards, checks)Limited
SetupSimple (online)Requires attorney

How They Work Together

  • Trust can fund the ABLE account
  • ABLE account used for:
    • Rent
    • Daily expenses
    • Flexible spending 

This combination is often optimal planning strategy 


9. Medicaid Payback Risk

At death:

  • Remaining ABLE funds may be subject to Medicaid recapture
  • Applies to Medicaid benefits received after account was opened 

However:

  • Some states have limited or no state-level recapture
  • Federal recapture still applies 

Important update:

  • Proposed legislation (ABLE Tomorrow Act) aims to eliminate Medicaid payback entirely 

10. New & Notable Planning Opportunities

1. 529 → ABLE Rollovers (Now Permanent)

  • Transfer unused education funds
  • Avoid penalties
  • Expand usability beyond education 

2. “ABLE to Work” Made Permanent

  • Allows higher contributions for employed individuals 

3. Saver’s Credit Inclusion

  • Continued eligibility for tax incentives 

4. Potential Integration with “Trump Accounts” (530A)

  • Can be rolled into ABLE at age 17
  • Avoids future asset-counting issues 

11. Key Rules Advisors Must Know

  • Only one ABLE account per person
  • Beneficiary is always the account owner
  • Authorized representatives follow a strict hierarchy:
    • Power of attorney
    • Guardian/conservator
    • Spouse → parent → sibling → grandparent → rep payee
  • Accounts are regulated under IRS code (Section 529A), not Social Security 

12. Strategic Planning Insights

1. ABLE Accounts Enable Financial Independence

  • First time many individuals can:
    • Save money
    • Control spending
    • Build long-term plans 

2. They Are Not Income Shelters

  • Income still counts for benefits
  • But assets in ABLE accounts are protected 

3. Best Used As a “Spending Layer”

  • ABLE = flexible, short-term spending
  • Trust = long-term asset protection 

4. State Selection Matters

Compare programs here:
https://abletoday.org/analyze-able-programs

Factors:

  • State tax benefits
  • Investment options
  • Fees
  • Features (cards, checks, etc.) 

13. Why This Matters for Advisors

ABLE accounts represent a high-impact planning opportunity:

  • Help clients preserve benefits
  • Improve quality of life for beneficiaries
  • Integrate with:
    • Estate planning
    • Trust strategies
    • Tax planning 

Most importantly:

They transform financial planning from “asset restriction” to financial empowerment


Bottom Line

ABLE accounts are one of the most powerful—and underutilized—tools in special needs planning.

With:

  • Expanded eligibility (age 46 rule)
  • Increased flexibility
  • New legislative momentum 

…they are becoming a core component of modern financial planning for families with disabilities.

Attendees Comments:

missy@financialexpertsnetwork.com
A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

A greater awareness of ABLE accounts and how they can be utilized to benefit special needs clients.
- Paul L.

You can open an ABLE account in another state.
- Linda P.

Doctor to attest to disability instead of playing with SSI or SDI, and need to be diagnosed prior to 46
- David B.

missy@financia…

Fri, 03/27/2026 - 16:20

Comments
A few comments from listeners when they were asked what the learned from the webinar:

A greater awareness of ABLE accounts and how they can be utilized to benefit special needs clients.
- Paul L.

You can open an ABLE account in another state.
- Linda P.

Doctor to attest to disability instead of playing with SSI or SDI, and need to be diagnosed prior to 46
- David B.
ABLE Accounts: New Rules, Powerful Planning Opportunities for Special Needs Families 03-26-2026

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