Uncle Sam has given families the
green light to use $10,000 per child each year to pay for private schools out
of 529 savings plans, but parents cannot count on states to give them the same
tax break.
A new tax law went into effect on
Jan. 1, leaving states scrambling to implement provisions that let families tap
state-sponsored college savings plans for private elementary or secondary
schools without owing taxes on the withdrawal.
Some states, like New York and
Nebraska, put pop-up warnings on their 529 college plan websites, saying that
families should not assume their state will follow federal laws. The state
treasurer’s office of Illinois, for one, does not intend to open the its
program to private school tuition.
Currently, all states follow the
federal government tax rules in one way: They all let people remove money
from 529 plans and use it for college without paying taxes. But 33 states also
give families additional tax deductions and credits when they contribute to 529
plans. The fate of those benefits is now unclear as states re-examine their
rules in light of federal changes.
Only about 20 states currently
automatically align their state laws on 529 plans to whatever the federal
government decides, according to Paul Curley, director of college saving
research for Strategic Insight.
Many states will have to decide
what to do next. States that have laws that specifically require 529 money go
toward only college or higher education such as a technical school will also
need to clarify their position for 2018 and the future.
If they stick with the
requirement to use 529s for college, the money parents take out for K-12
private school tuition may be considered a non-qualified distribution. That
means people would have to pay taxes and perhaps even penalties.
In states that do not end up
following the new federal rules, there is more at stake for families than
simply paying taxes on the money they withdraw to pay tuition for a private
school. Some states give people who save in 529 plans rewards every year they
contribute to the plan. The reward may be either a deduction or a tax credit.
Unless some laws are changed,
families could be forced to pay back the tax credits or deductions they
received for putting money into 529 accounts if they use their savings for
private school, said James DiUlio, chairman of the College Savings Plans
Network, an umbrella group for the state plans.
The impact will vary by state,
said Susie Bauer, senior vice president and 529 manager for Baird Private
Wealth Management. She estimates that in Iowa, parents with $100,000 in income
who contribute $1,500 a year for each of their two children to a 529 could owe
$202 for each year if they spend that money on K-12 costs. In New York,
parents with $100,000 in income might owe $146 for $3,000 in yearly
contributions. In Illinois, the estimated amount is $84 per year, Bauer
said.
How the money would be recovered
is unclear.
In Illinois, as in many states,
people either have tuition payments sent directly from the 529 to a college, or
a parent pays tuition and requests that they be reimbursed from their 529 plan.
Reimbursements are difficult to police but could be detected in an audit, said
Illinois Treasurer spokesman Greg Rivara.
The money involved at the state
level is significant. According to the Illinois Revenue Department, the state
gives up $29 million in revenue for 529 tax breaks to encourage college
savings. In California, it is estimated at $55 million.
States stand to lose millions
more if parents start using these plans heavily for K-12 educations, keeping
money in the accounts for a very short amount of time before spending it.