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Harborscape
Professional Building
1524 Alaskan Way, Suite 200
Seattle, WA 98101-1514 |
Phone:
206 | 583.0155
Fax: 206 | 343.5759
www.faolaw.com
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Gift and Estate
Planning
Consider New and Improved Qualified State Tuition Programs
Estate Planner Jan-Feb 2000
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For parents and grandparents, a simple, tax-effective method of
providing for a child or grandchild's education is to pay the tuition
directly to the college at the time the child attends. But if children
are young (or not yet born), you may not want to wait that long.
A new way to pay for college education now exists thanks to recent
federal tax law changes and new state laws: The qualified state
tuition program (QSTP).
A QSTP lets you to take advantage of the benefits of early education
funding through a simplified process. Even better, contributions
to such programs provide substantial tax advantages.
A QSTP is a state-established program allowing a person to prepay
tuition or contribute to an account established for paying higher
education expenses. This method may have been underutilized in the
past because of the delay between the federal tax law changes that
improved the plans and the development of sophisticated state programs
to implement the changes. More and more often, states are implementing
these programs in an effort to catch up to the states that foresaw
the benefits of such plans. Some of these plans, such as those currently
in effect in New Hampshire, Maine and New York, allow you to save
for college education expenses that can be incurred in any state.
Today's QSTPs have the advantage of allowing contributions to appreciate
in value tax-deferred until earnings are distributed. Then the student
-- not the donor -- pays tax on the gain. The student's tax bracket
is probably low, resulting in further tax savings. Distributions
used to pay for college also may qualify for the Hope credit or
the Lifetime Learning credit.
The
Advantage of Giving
Contributions to a QSTP now qualify for the $10,000 annual gift
tax exclusion ($20,000 for a married couple). Before the change
in the law, contributions to QSTPs were not considered completed
gifts and did not qualify for the annual exclusion. This created
a problem: Funds you set aside to pay for college education would
be included in your taxable estate if you died before the funds
were distributed.
To avoid this result, some people would take the time and expense
of making gifts to a trust. Gifts to a trust could qualify for the
annual exclusion by granting the beneficiary a power to withdraw
the funds for a limited time. Although this technique is still widely
used, the IRS has challenged the withdrawal power (known as a Crummey
power).
Alternatively, parents or grandparents could make exclusion gifts
to a 2503(c) Trust. Such a trust makes the funds available for the
benefit of the beneficiaries before age 21, passing directly to
them at age 21. The risk with this type of trust is that the funds
could be depleted before the beneficiary receives a diploma. A QSTPs
provides an IRS-approved method of making completed gifts without
the risk that the funds may be consumed prematurely.
The
Lump Sum Option
Not only do your gifts to a QSTP qualify for the annual gift tax
exclusion, you can also elect to have one year's contribution be
treated as being made ratably over five years. The effect of this
provision is that you can contribute $50,000 to a QSTP ($100,000
for a married couple) in one year.
Giving a lump sum is much simpler than making gifts each year and
allows you to leverage the annual exclusion when the gift amount
is fixed in the first year. Your gift also starts earning on a tax
deferred basis sooner. But you should note that if you die within
five years, the portion of the contribution allocable to periods
after your death would be included in your estate. You should also
be aware that the program will limit the total amount you may contribute
to the plan, but there are ways to leverage and increase the total
amount, especially for larger families.
QSTP
vs. Exclusion
Funding a QSTP early may allow you to pay for the entire cost of
a college education. You may use distributions from a QSTP to pay
for room and board expenses for students who attend school at least
half-time and also for tuition, fees, books and supplies.
In contrast, the gift tax exclusion for making gifts directly to
an educational institution is limited to tuition. Direct gifts made
when the student enters college may fall short of paying for the
cost of attending college, because most college students also incur
substantial room and board expenses that do not qualify for that
exclusion. You may need to make additional annual exclusion gifts
to cover the shortfall.
Leftovers
and Remainders
If the student doesn't use all of the QSTP funds, you may designate
another family member as a new beneficiary. In fact, you, the donor,
retain the right to designate and re-designate a different family
member beneficiary at any time. Some plans also permit donors to
take back their gifts, subject to penalties. Even with all these
retained rights, the QSTP gift is removed from the donor's estate
for tax purposes and may be exempt from the generation-skipping
transfer tax.
One of the drawbacks of making contributions to a QSTP is that
neither you nor the designated beneficiary may directly or indirectly
control the fund's investment. But many programs are professionally
managed and offered in conjunction with major investment firms,
ameliorating this limitation. For example, Fidelity administers
the New Hampshire QSTP, Merrill Lynch administers the Maine QSTP
and TIAA-CREF manages the New York QSTP.
We
Can Help
If you would like to learn more about QSTPs and other ways to save
for expenses associated with college, let us know. Our professionals
would be happy to answer your questions and help you take advantage
of every education tax incentive possible.
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