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Section 529 College Savings Options from The Commonwealth of Virginia.

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Presentation on theme: "Section 529 College Savings Options from The Commonwealth of Virginia."— Presentation transcript:

1 Section 529 College Savings Options from The Commonwealth of Virginia

2 Why Save? The positive effect of saving versus borrowing To accumulate $10,000 in 10 years at 7% interest Save $58 per month To repay $10,000 over 10 years at 7% Pay $116 per month The real cost of borrowing rather than saving $116 - $58 = $58 x 12 months x 10 years = $6,960

3 529 Assets and Account Growth Total Assets in State-Sponsored Section 529 College Savings Plans, 1996 to 2006 Number of State-Sponsored Section 529 Accounts (with Average Savings), 1996 to 2006

4 History of 529 November 8,1994: 6 th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals holds that Michigan Education Trust is an agency of the state and not subject to federal taxation; ruling only applies to states in 6 th Circuit (MI, OH, KY, TN) 1996: Small Business Job Protection Act creates Section 529 1997: Taxpayer Relief Act adds room and board as qualified expense

5 History of 529 1998: Proposed Regulations issued by IRS 2001: Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act- tax-free qualified withdrawals through 2010 IRS Notice 2001-55 (investment direction) IRS Notice 2001-81 (record keeping)

6 History of 529 February, 2006: Higher Education Reconciliation ACT (HERA) ends disparity in treatment of prepaid and savings 529 accounts for federal financial aid eligibility (now both are treated as an asset, not a “resource”) 2006: Pension Protection Act makes federal tax-free qualified distributions permanent

7 Virginia Legislation and Milestones 1994: Legislation authorizing a prepaid tuition program was passed unanimously by the Virginia General Assembly. Delayed effective date of July 1, 1996 to allow for resolution of uncertainty over federal tax and securities law issues December 1, 1996: Virginia Prepaid Education Program (VPEP) opens its first enrollment period

8 Virginia Legislation and Milestones 1998: Virginia General Assembly enacts state tax deduction or VPEP account owners 1999: Virginia General Assembly removes $2,000 annual cap for state tax deduction for account owners who are age 70 or older 1999: Virginia General Assembly authorizes addition of savings trust accounts and extends state tax deduction to these accounts; changes agency name to Virginia College Savings Plan

9 Virginia Legislation and Milestones December, 1999: Virginia Education Savings Trust (VEST) opens February, 2002: CollegeAmerica, Virginia’s partnership with American Funds, opens 2007: Virginia General Assembly increases state tax deduction to $4,000 per account per year with unlimited carry forward; higher amount will be effective for tax years beginning January 1, 2009

10 Virginia College Savings Plan Who we are –VCSP is an independent state agency –We administer Internal Revenue Code § 529 Qualified Tuition Programs Our current investment options –VPEP SM –VEST SM –CollegeAmerica ® –CollegeWealth SM

11 Virginia Prepaid Education Program SM (VPEP) Eligibility –Purchaser - age 18 or any legal entity –Beneficiary - 9th grade and under –State residency (account owner or beneficiary must be a Virginia resident) Plans –Purchase 1-5 years of university or 1-3 years of community college –Maximum 5yr. university and 3yr. community college contracts –$25 application fee

12 VPEP Benefits –Cover future tuition and mandatory fees at Virginia public colleges –Can also use at any accredited college in the country eligible to accept federal financial aid –Program backed by statutory guarantee Limited enrollment period December 1, 2007 – February 29, 2008

13 Using VPEP Benefits For Virginia public schools –Full coverage of tuition and mandatory fees for normal undergraduate full-time course load (no coverage of course-specific charges) For Virginia private schools –Payments + actual interest rate –Cap = highest Virginia public institution For Out-of-state schools –Payments + reasonable rate of return (institutional money market rate) –Cap = average Virginia public institution

14 Investment Managers Capital Guardian Trust Century Capital Management Chase Investment Counsel Donald Smith & Co., Inc. Dreyfus Franklin Templeton Invesco LSV Investment Management NWQ Investment Management Company Piedmont Investment Advisors, LLC Pier Capital Rothschild Asset Management Sands Capital Tattersal Advisory (Wachovia) Thompson, Siegel & Walmsley, Inc. Utendahl Capital Management, LP Vanguard Virginia Dept. of Treasury Western Asset (Legg Mason) Westfield Capital Management

15 Virginia Education Savings Trust SM (VEST ) No age limit for beneficiary or state residency requirement for owner Can be used for: –Tuition, mandatory fees, any other fees required for enrollment or attendance –Room and board –Required textbooks and equipment –Computers (if required by school) –Special needs services Enrollment is open all year Fluctuates with the market (market risk) One-time $25 application fee

16 Types of VEST Accounts Age-based Evolving Portfolios –Accounts automatically shift every three years to become more conservative Non-evolving Portfolios –Accounts will remain as conservative or aggressive as originally chosen by you until changed (can change only once per calendar year)

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19 CollegeAmerica ® VCSP’s third 529 option Partnership with American Funds Sold exclusively through financial advisers nationwide 1-800-421-4120 americanfunds.com

20 CollegeWealth SM Available only through participating banks FDIC insured to the maximum amount allowed by law No age limits Enrollment open all year No state residency requirements

21 Using 529 Savings Eligible Educational Institutions –Accredited post-secondary schools Includes graduate schools –Proprietary, vocational and foreign institutions may be eligible –Must be eligible to participate in federal financial aid programs (Title IV) –To find out if a school is eligible, go to the Department of Education’s web site at www.fafsa.ed.gov and click on “my school codes” www.fafsa.ed.gov

22 529s Effect on Financial Aid Effective July 1, 2009: VPEP –Considered an asset of the parent for dependent students and an asset of the student for independent students –Reported on FAFSA at refund value VEST –Considered an asset of the parent for dependent students and an asset of the student for independent students. –Reported on FAFSA at market value (It is always prudent to check with your school’s Financial Aid Office to determine how your student’s financial aid eligibility might be affected)

23 529 Flexibility You control your savings Change account owner –Only one account owner allowed –Optional designation of individual who can access account information –Requires U.S. citizenship or resident alien status Change beneficiary to another “member of the family” –Beneficiary’s immediate family and their spouses (includes descendants) –First cousins –Step-siblings and adopted children

24 529 Flexibility Rollovers –Can roll over from one type of plan to another (VEST to VPEP or vice versa), or from one state’s qualified plan to another state’s qualified plan Plan-to-Plan rollover (without changing the beneficiary) allowed once every 12 months Investment direction (for VEST, CollegeWealth and CollegeAmerica programs) –May change investment options within the same plan once per calendar year

25 529 Distributions Qualified or non-qualified distribution is determined by taxpayer Taxpayer must retain all documentation Any penalty for nonqualified distributions must be reported on taxpayer’s return –10% federal penalty and taxes on earnings Form 1099-Q issued for all distributions

26 Federal Tax Advantages Tax-free growth Tax-free distributions for qualified expenses Favorable estate and gift tax treatment Savings bonds may be used to fund accounts –See www.TreasuryDirect.gov

27 Virginia State Tax Deduction $2,000 deduction per tax year per account –Unlimited carry-forward –Deduction is only for the account owner Only available for investments in Virginia 529s Accelerated deduction for those over age 70 Recapture provision –Refunds and rollovers to another state’s 529 plan or to some other non-qualified savings plans –Exceptions—death, disability, scholarship

28 Refunds VPEP –More than three years = amount paid in + reasonable rate of return –Less than three years = amount paid in only VEST/CollegeAmerica/CollegeWealth –Market value of the account Federal Penalty –10% of earnings penalty reported by taxpayer Death, disability, scholarship, rollover (VA plan to VA plan) –Refunds for these are exempt from federal penalty –You can also retain your state tax benefits (except for rollovers to another state’s plan)

29 Matriculation ■ Distributions began in 2000 ■ Over $322 million distributed through 09/30/07 (both VPEP and VEST) ■ Approximately 69% attend in-state public four- year institutions; 11% attend community college; 7% in-state private; and 13% attend more than 460 out-of-state schools ■ 29% overall and 36% of students attending in- state public schools attend University of Virginia, Virginia Tech and William & Mary

30 For more information Virginia College Savings Plan Toll free 1-888-567-0540 www.Virginia529.com


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