Tax Guide |
|
As you may have predicted, there are rules that govern who is eligible to be the beneficiary of a Coverdell Education Savings Account (ESA).
An ESA has to be opened before the beneficiary of the ESA is 18 years of age. There's no age minimum--an ESA can be opened on the day the beneficiary is born. Once the beneficiary reaches age 18, no more contributions can be made to the ESA set up for them. There is an exception to the age rule for beneficiaries with special needs.
Mandatory distributions. If the beneficiary of an ESA turns 30 and there's still a balance in the ESA, the balance has to be distributed within 30 days. Of course, the money distributed is no longer tax-free unless it is used to pay qualified educational expenses. The beneficiary has to pay ordinary income tax and a 10 percent penalty to boot on the distribution. The age limit is waived for beneficiaries with special needs, (physical, mental or emotional conditions, including learning disabilities).
Beneficiary/family relationships. You may be wondering what the beneficiary's relationship must be to the person or persons making the contributions to the ESA. The answer is that no relationship between the contributor and the beneficiary is necessary. They do not have to be parent and child, or grandparents and grandchild, although this is certainly the most common scenario. Remember, the contributor isn't getting a tax deduction for putting money into the ESA, so there must be a different incentive, and that incentive usually is investing for the education of a child or grandchild.
There is one situation where the family relationship does matter in regards to ESAs, and that is if the beneficiary wants to transfer his or her ESA to someone else. An ESA's assets can be transferred from one ESA to another. An ESA's beneficiary may also be substituted with a new beneficiary from the current beneficiary's family. The family member must be a spouse, child, grandchild, parent, grandparent, sibling, aunt, uncle, or cousin. Some in-laws qualify as well. The new beneficiary must also be under 30 years old.
On that note, situations can arise that make the ability to change the beneficiary of an ESA very important.
|
|
© 2024 Wolters Kluwer. All Rights Reserved.