How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan

  • June 4, 2009
  • 1,079 Views
Please install Flash

It’s never too early to put away money for your child’s education. Consider these options before choosing a plan.

You Will Need

  • A small amount of money to start with
  • And a computer
How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Start now

Step 1: Start now

Start saving right now – even if your child is an infant. The more time you have, the more money you can save, and the more interest you’ll earn.

How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Get a 529

Step 2: Get a 529

Sign up for a state-sponsored 529 savings plan. All the money you put in earns interest tax-free, and there are no fees or taxes when you withdraw it as long as you use it for school. Each state has different rates and rules; type “529” and a state name to find information.

You don’t have to choose your own state’s plan, and you don’t have to stay with one plan. You just have to limit transfers to once every 12 months.

How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Start an account in your own name

Step 3: Start an account in your own name

If you open any other accounts for your child’s education, make sure you put the accounts in your name. This will make it easier for your child to qualify for federal financial aid because the financial-aid application assumes only 5.6 percent of a parent-owned account will be used to pay for college, versus 20 percent of a student-owned plan.

How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Join Upromise

Step 4: Join Upromise

Register at Upromise.com, and you’ll get money for your college fund every time you buy something at specific retailers and restaurants. You can arrange for the rebates to be deposited into your 529 savings plan every quarter.

Friends and relatives can open UPromise accounts linked to your child’s 529.

How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Consider other funds

Step 5: Consider other funds

Consider other plans, like mutual funds that specialize in college-tuition savings, or an educational IRA. Just like a 529, these have more lenient tax rules than savings vehicles not earmarked for college. Consult a financial adviser to get started.

How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Invest wisely

Step 6: Invest wisely

When investing for college, consider how many years you have to save. Stocks have the potential to provide higher profits but are risky; bonds are safer, but yield limited returns. If your child is more than 10 years from college, invest slightly more heavily in stocks. If your child is past third grade, choose safer investments.

How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Get the word out

Step 7: Get the word out

Tell loved ones about your child’s college fund and ask them to contribute whenever there’s a holiday, birthday, or special occasion.

How To Get Started With a College Savings Plan: Have your child help, too!

Step 8: Have your child help, too!

College isn’t just your responsibility! Once your child is old enough for an allowance or a part-time job, encourage them to add to their college fund. Research shows that children who contribute to their college fund tend to get better grades because they learn to take their education seriously at an early age.

Over the past thirty years, college tuition rates have risen between 5 to 8 percent a year – outpacing inflation.

Something wrong?

Report This How-To

Cancel

Comments (1)

Marlener

Start saving now for your child's college education, or you'll be in for a rude awakening. Significant growth comes from compound savings that have been given time. With a 529 college personal savings plan in place and tax-free, you are able to be on your way. Even if they end up qualifying for scholarships, why not shoot for a secure educational future? Here is the proof: <;a href=";http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2011/05/02/529-college-savings-plans/"; title=";A 529 higher education personal savings plan makes college affordable";>;529 college savings plans are a better deal than ever<;/a>;

9 months ago by Marlener

Reply

or to post a comment. Or, sign in using your Facebook to comment
and share your activity with your friends

Video is in University Seminar (49 videos)