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From The Tax Adviser: Planning for Higher Education
ESTATE
PLANNING STRATEGIES However, he or she cannot make another tax-free gift to the same beneficiary for five years. If the donor dies within the five-year period, a portion of the gift will revert back to his or her estate. Donor retains control. Although funds are removed from the estate, the donor retains full control over the account. A beneficiary cannot make withdrawals without the donors consent. The donor can change the beneficiary to another family member at any time, refuse to pay for a college of which he or she disapproves and/or close an account and take back the money (subject to tax and a penalty). The ability to change beneficiaries enables a grandparent to give more than $55,000 ($110,000 for married couples) to a grandchild within a five-year period without incurring gift tax consequences. Caution. A change in beneficiary from one family member to another who is a generation younger than the original beneficiary creates gift tax for that original beneficiary. That personif he or she makes no other gifts to the younger beneficiary in the transfer yearcould elect to spread the gift over five years without incurring gift tax on the transfer. But he or she cannot make any other tax-free gifts to the new beneficiary for five years. NONQUALIFIED
WITHDRAWLS The EGTRRA created a 10% federal penalty for nonqualified withdrawals, applied only to the earnings portion of the distribution and generally only for distributions after 2003. Most states (but not all) eliminated their penalty after the EGTRRA. A taxpayer considering a nonqualified distribution from a section 529 plan may want to research whether the state in which he or she maintains an account still has a penalty; if it does, perhaps the taxpayer can roll the account over to a state without a penalty before making a nonqualified distribution. For more information, see the Tax Clinic, edited by Allen Beck, in the October 2002 issue of The Tax Adviser. Lesli Laffie,
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