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Session 3 of CP MC: What Every Advisor Should Know About Evaluating 529 Plans
Guest Expert: Mary Morris, Commonwealth Savers (formerly known as Virginia529)
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Attendee's Excellent Rating: 86%
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Summary: What Every Advisor Should Know About Evaluating 529 Plans

 

Featured Experts:

  • Mary Morris, CEO of Virginia’s Commonwealth Savers and Chair of the College Savings Plans Network (CSPN)
  • Chris Hunter, Deputy Director, National Association of State Treasurers
  • Beth Walker, College Planning Specialist and CFP®
  • Host: Tom Dickson, Founder, Financial Experts Network

1. Evolution and Structure of 529 Plans

Mary Morris provided historical context: 529 plans originated from state-run prepaid tuition programs that predated the federal Internal Revenue Code §529 (passed in 1996). These plans allow tax-advantaged education savings through either:

  • Prepaid tuition programs (defined benefit)
  • Savings plans (defined contribution)

All 529 plans must be state-sponsored except for one—the Private College 529 Plan, run by a consortium of private colleges under a special federal exemption.

📖 Fact check: IRS overview of 529 plans:
https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/529-plans-questions-and-answers


2. Direct vs. Advisor-Sold Plans

529 plans fall into two primary categories:

TypeAccess MethodTypical FeesBest For
Direct-soldOpen directly through state websiteLower (index-based)Self-directed investors
Advisor-soldPurchased through financial advisors (RIA, broker-dealer)Higher (advisor and fund fees)Clients seeking professional guidance

Most states offer both types. For instance, Virginia offers:

  • Invest529 (direct) and
  • CollegeAmerica (advisor-sold, managed by American Funds) — the nation’s largest 529 plan.

📖 Fact check: College Savings Plans Network: https://www.collegesavings.org


3. Federal and State Tax Advantages

  • Earnings grow tax-deferred, and qualified withdrawals are tax-free for education expenses.
  • Most states (34) offer a state income tax deduction or credit for contributions.
  • A few (like Colorado, Kansas, Pennsylvania) allow deductions for any state’s plan (“parity states”).
  • Nine states offer no state income tax, and thus no deduction applies.

Key Tip for Advisors: Always confirm a client’s state conformity rules—some states don’t align with recent federal expansions (e.g., K–12 or student loans).

📖 Fact check: Saving for College — State Tax Benefits:
https://www.savingforcollege.com/article/which-states-offer-a-529-plan-tax-deduction-or-credit


4. Qualified Expenses (Post–Tax Reconciliation Act Updates, 2025)

Qualified expenses now include:

  • Tuition and fees (2-year, 4-year, vocational, and graduate programs)
  • Books, computers, and supplies
  • Room and board (if enrolled at least half-time)
  • K–12 education — Up to $20,000 per year (starting 2026) for tuition, tutoring, or test fees
  • Student loan repayment — Up to $10,000 per borrower, plus $10,000 for each sibling
  • Continuing education and professional certifications (new under 2025 law)
  • Workforce training programs under the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA)

📖 Fact check: U.S. Department of Education – WIOA Programs:
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/eta/wioa

📖 Fact check: IRS Publication 970 (Tax Benefits for Education):
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p970


5. Estate Planning and Gifting Opportunities

529 plans are powerful estate-planning tools:

  • Contributions are considered completed gifts, yet the owner retains control.
  • Individuals can “front-load” up to five years of gifts at once (2025 limits: $95,000 individual / $190,000 couple per beneficiary) without triggering gift tax.
  • Assets are removed from the taxable estate but remain under the donor’s control.

📖 Fact check: IRS Form 709 instructions (Gift Tax Rules):
https://www.irs.gov/instructions/i709


6. Ownership and Financial Aid Considerations

Owner TypeFAFSA ImpactNotes
Parent-ownedCounts as up to 5.64% of asset valueMinimal impact
Grandparent-ownedNo longer affects FAFSA (post-2023 rule change)“Grandparent penalty” eliminated
Student-ownedCounts at 20%Avoid if possible

Tip: FAFSA now excludes grandparent-owned 529 withdrawals from the “student income” test, a major planning benefit for multigenerational families.

📖 Fact check: Federal Student Aid – FAFSA & 529 treatment:
https://studentaid.gov/help-center/answers/article/fafsa-529-account


7. Investment Options and Risk Management

529 plans typically offer limited, pre-set portfolios:

  • Age-based / Target-enrollment portfolios: Automatically shift from equity to fixed income as college approaches.
  • Static (target risk) portfolios: Conservative, moderate, or aggressive mixes.
  • Principal-protected portfolios: FDIC-insured or stable-value options, increasingly popular as interest rates rise.

Average account balances nationwide are about $25,000–$35,000, with monthly contributions around $150–$200.

📖 Fact check: College Savings Plans Network Data Reports:
https://www.collegesavings.org/research-reports/


8. New Flexibility for Unused Funds

Advisors can now recommend several tax-efficient strategies for leftover funds:

  • Rollover to Roth IRA: Up to $35,000 lifetime, if the account is at least 15 years old.
  • Transfer to ABLE accounts for beneficiaries with disabilities (made permanent in 2025).
  • Change beneficiary within the family (siblings, cousins, grandchildren).
  • Future proposal: Allow unused funds to be donated to charity—under discussion for 2026.

📖 Fact check: SECURE 2.0 Act Section 126 (Roth Rollover Provision):
https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/2954/text

📖 Fact check: ABLE National Resource Center:
https://www.ablenrc.org


9. Evaluating Plans with the CSPN Comparison Tool

Chris Hunter demonstrated the College Savings Plans Network’s “Find My State’s Plan” and “Search and Compare” tools, which:

  • Aggregate verified data from all 529 plans nationwide.
  • Compare fees, investment options, and tax benefits across up to three states.
  • Are free and noncommercial for both advisors and consumers.

📖 Fact check: College Savings Plans Network comparison tool:
https://www.collegesavings.org


10. Key Takeaways for Financial Advisors

Review State-Specific Rules: Always check client residency benefits before recommending out-of-state plans.
Integrate with Estate and Tax Planning: Use 5-year gifting and Roth rollovers strategically.
Account for FAFSA & CSS Profile Differences: CSS may still require disclosure of non-parental 529s.
Encourage Family Conversations: Educate parents and grandparents on coordination and ownership impact.
Highlight Accessibility: With new K–12, vocational, and adult education coverage, 529s are now a lifelong education savings vehicle, not just for college.


Recommended Fact-Check & Reference URLs:

  • IRS 529 Q&A: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/529-plans-questions-and-answers
  • Saving for College – State Tax Deductions: https://www.savingforcollege.com/article/which-states-offer-a-529-plan-tax-deduction-or-credit
  • College Savings Plans Network: https://www.collegesavings.org
  • U.S. Department of Labor – WIOA Overview: https://www.dol.gov/agencies/eta/wioa
  • IRS Publication 970: https://www.irs.gov/publications/p970
  • SECURE 2.0 Act (Roth Rollovers): https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/2954/text
  • ABLE National Resource Center: https://www.ablenrc.org

 

Attendees Comments:

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

The 529 plan comparison tool Chris Hunter presented was news to me. More elaborate than most clients will need (typically they choose among no more than 3 plans). Too much info will overwhelm clients, but as an advisor it's good to know such a tool exists.
- Maria R.

Learned ways to use 529 funds and tax credits. Learned there’s a good tool on the website for state 529 plans.
- Kyoko K.

Eligibility to transfer to ABLE.
- Gabriela Q.

missy@financia…

Thu, 10/16/2025 - 15:14

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

The 529 plan comparison tool Chris Hunter presented was news to me. More elaborate than most clients will need (typically they choose among no more than 3 plans). Too much info will overwhelm clients, but as an advisor it's good to know such a tool exists.
- Maria R.

Learned ways to use 529 funds and tax credits. Learned there’s a good tool on the website for state 529 plans.
- Kyoko K.

Eligibility to transfer to ABLE.
- Gabriela Q.
Session 3 of CP MC: What Every Advisor Should Know About Evaluating 529 Plans 10-15-2025
Session 3 of CP MC: What Every Advisor Should Know About Evaluating 529 Plans Q&A 10-15-2025