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College Funding for Multiple Generations with Dynasty Trusts and 529 Plans
This Financial Experts Network webinar, hosted by Tom Dickson, featured estate planning attorneys Alan Gassman and Brandon Ketron discussing how to use dynasty trusts and 529 plans to fund education across multiple generations. The speakers addressed tax strategies, trust structuring, Superfunding contributions, 529 rollovers, state tax issues, creditor protection, and new planning techniques after recent federal legislative changes.
1. Overview and Planning Context
Tom opened the webinar by explaining that the session would focus on multigenerational college funding using dynasty trusts, with only limited coverage of 529 basics because prior webinars (Mary Morris, SavingForCollege) already covered them deeply.
The presentation emphasized:
- Why wealthy families should begin funding 529s immediately at birth to maximize tax-free compounding and creditor protection.
- How 529 plans can be funded by trusts, SLATs, or other entities, because no statute restricts 529 ownership to individuals.
- How dynasty trusts may provide long-term control, tax efficiency, and asset protection for education funding over many generations.
2. Key Legislative Updates Affecting 529 Plans
Brandon outlined important federal changes enacted in recent years (including SECURE 2.0), which expanded the utility of 529 plans:
New eligible education expenses
- K–12 tuition (up to annual limits)
- Books, materials, online learning tools
- SAT/ACT prep and test fees
- Dual enrollment and AP course fees
- Vocational / technical schooling
- Registered apprenticeships
Increases to K–12 withdrawal limits
Starting 2026, the permitted K–12 withdrawal increases from $10,000 to $20,000 per year.
Special needs planning
529 assets may now be rolled to ABLE accounts for individuals with disabilities (within limitations).
529 → Roth IRA rollover (SECURE 2.0)
A major new provision allows up to $35,000 (lifetime per beneficiary) to be rolled tax-free from a long-held 529 plan into a Roth IRA, subject to:
- 15-year minimum account age
- Contributions within past 5 years cannot be rolled
- Annual Roth IRA contribution limits still apply
- Beneficiary must have earned income
Speakers noted the open question: If the 529 beneficiary is changed, does the 15-year clock restart? There is no authoritative IRS guidance yet.
3. Superfunding 529 Plans (Annual Exclusion Acceleration Strategy)
Brandon explained how superfunding works:
- Up to 5 years of annual exclusion gifts can be contributed at once.
- At 2025 exclusion levels ($19,000), that equals $95,000 per donor, or $190,000 if spouses elect gift-splitting.
Important considerations:
- If the donor dies during the 5-year period, the prorated unused exclusion is added back into the donor’s estate.
- Small annual gifts (birthday gifts, etc.) technically consume exclusion in superfunding years, although rarely audited.
- Superfunding early (at birth) has outsized benefits because of tax-free growth and its ability to cover K–12 + college.
4. Prepaid Tuition + 529 Plans: A Combined Strategy
Brandon highlighted that many states offer prepaid tuition programs covering public university tuition, but not:
- Out-of-state tuition
- Private schools
- Room & board
Families can combine prepaid plans with 529 plans to hedge inflation risk, improve flexibility, and supplement educational expenses that prepaid plans do not cover.
5. Advanced Planning: Dynasty Trust Funding of 529 Plans
Alan and Brandon noted why trusts can own 529 plans and fund them with trust assets.
There is no federal requirement limiting ownership to individuals. Thus:
- Dynasty trusts
- SLATs
- Life insurance trusts
- Other irrevocable trusts
Benefits of trust ownership
- Creditor protection: Many states protect 529 plans, but not all; trusts add a second layer of protection.
- Control: The trustee—not the child or divorcing spouse—controls account ownership and beneficiary changes.
- GST-exempt dynastic planning: A GST-exempt dynasty trust allows 529 benefits to cascade across generations without triggering new GST tax events.
- Removal from donor’s estate while still ensuring the family benefits.
- Planning with grantor trusts: A grantor can pay income tax for the trust and increase wealth transfer efficiency; large contributions to 529s can reduce grantor-trust “tax burn.”
Potential disadvantages
- Gift tax rules: Contributions to the trust (not directly to the 529 account) do not qualify for five-year superfunding; only one annual exclusion per trust beneficiary is available unless Crummey powers are used.
- Financial aid: Trust-owned 529s may be counted as student resources in FAFSA/CSS, though guidance is inconsistent.
- More formalities: Crummey notices, trustee oversight, legal complexity.
6. Beneficiary Flexibility & Gift/GST Rules
Brandon explained that changing beneficiaries inside a family is highly flexible:
Changing to same generation family member
(Not a gift; no GST implications.)
Examples: sibling → sibling, cousin → cousin.
Changing to a lower generation
This is treated as a gift by the prior beneficiary, not the owner.
This is advantageous when the parent has used their gift exemption but the child beneficiary has not.
Dynasty trust twist
If the 529 is owned by a GST-exempt dynasty trust, most generational shifts should not trigger GST tax.
7. 529 Loss Harvesting Strategy (Rare but Valuable)
Alan described a counterintuitive but IRS-compliant strategy: If a 529 declines—for example from $100,000 → $70,000:
- Open a new 529 plan and fund that plan for future education.
- Let the new 529 grow and use it for education.
- Wait until the original depressed plan grows back to $100,000.
- Withdraw the full balance, tax-free, because:
- Withdrawals are prorated between basis and earnings.
- Up to the basis ($100k contribution) is tax-free and penalty-free.
- Any taxes or penalties apply only to earnings, and here earnings = $0.
This effectively recaptures the “loss space” inside the 529.
External verification:
IRS Publication 970 confirms pro-rata calculation rules and 10% penalty applying only to earnings, not contributions.
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p970
8. Rollover Strategies & Multigenerational Roth Funding
A $35,000 529-to-Roth rollover can grow substantially over time:
- At a 7% assumed annual return, value at age 60 ≈ $327,000
- At age 70 ≈ $645,000
This creates inherited education → retirement compounding for future generations.
9. Tuition Payments by Dynasty Trusts + 529 Reimbursement (Unsettled Legal Issue)
Alan raised the planning question:
If a grantor trust pays tuition directly to a school (which is tax-free under IRC §2503(e))…
Can the trust later reimburse itself using tax-free 529 withdrawals?
Brandon noted:
- 529 withdrawals do not require direct tracing to expenses.
- Reimbursement may be allowed, but IRS has issued no clear authority, so practitioners should document carefully and await further guidance.
External fact check on §2503(e) tuition exclusion:
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2503
10. State Income Tax Issues (Example: Pennsylvania)
A participant asked whether superfunding affects Pennsylvania state income tax benefits.
Brandon noted that state treatment varies and must be researched individually.
External reference for PA’s 529 deduction:
PA allows a deduction per beneficiary up to:
https://www.pa529.com/forms-and-resources/faq/
(Currently $17,000 per individual contributor; contribution timing and superfunding implications should be confirmed with PA DOR.)
11. Suitability of Dynasty Trusts (Minimum Asset Levels)
Alan emphasized:
- A dynasty trust can be worthwhile with as little as $400k–$500k, especially if creditor protection is needed.
- Larger estates ($1M–$3M+) gain greater benefits.
12. EstateView Software (Technical Issues Noted)
Alan attempted to demonstrate EstateView, a planning engine offering:
- Automated estate tax modeling
- Trust structuring analysis
- AI document review
- Tax return data extraction
Due to technical difficulties, a full demonstration will occur in a January webinar.
External Fact-Checking Sources (Written-Out URLs)
529 Plan Tax Rules
IRS Publication 970 — Education Tax Benefits
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p970
IRC §529 — Qualified Tuition Programs
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/529
FINRA 529 Plan Overview
https://www.finra.org/investors/learn-to-invest/types-investments/529-plans
Tuition Exclusion & Trust Payments
IRC §2503(e): Tax-free tuition payments
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2503
ABLE Accounts & Rollover Rules
IRS ABLE Account FAQ
https://www.irs.gov/government-entities/federal-state-local-governments/able-accounts-faqs
529 → Roth IRA Rollovers (SECURE 2.0)
Congressional summary of SECURE 2.0 rollover provision
https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/2617
State-Specific Tax Information
Pennsylvania 529 Plan: Contribution & Deduction Rules
https://www.pa529.com/forms-and-resources/faq/
SavingForCollege — State 529 Tax Benefits
https://www.savingforcollege.com/article/what-state-tax-benefits-are-available-when-contributing-to-a-529-plan
GST Tax Rules
IRS GST Tax Overview
https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/generation-skipping-transfer-tax
Benefits of Withdrawing assets from a 529 plan when the market has declined.
- Anne D.
Taking losses all cost basis out without 10% excise tax
- Tinh W.
The ability to roll over a 529 into a Roth
- Jennifer P.

Attendees Comments:
Benefits of Withdrawing assets from a 529 plan when the market has declined.
- Anne D.
Taking losses all cost basis out without 10% excise tax
- Tinh W.
The ability to roll over a 529 into a Roth
- Jennifer P.