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529 plans: saving for college the smart way

7 min readUpdated June 2026

College costs have risen dramatically over the past few decades, and there's no reliable sign they're slowing down. Saving early β€” even modest amounts β€” makes an enormous difference because of compound growth. The tax code's designated tool for this is the 529 plan, and it's more flexible and powerful than most families realize.

What is a 529 plan?

A 529 is a state-sponsored investment account designed for education expenses. You contribute after-tax dollars, the money grows invested (in mutual funds or age-based portfolios), and withdrawals for qualified education expenses β€” tuition, fees, room and board, required books, even K-12 tuition up to certain amounts β€” are completely tax-free at the federal level.

Every state offers at least one 529 plan, but you are not required to use your own state's plan. You can open a 529 in any state and use it at any eligible school anywhere in the US (and many abroad). This matters because some states' plans have better investment options or lower fees than others.

The state tax break β€” a bonus for many families

While 529 contributions are not federally deductible, many states offer a deduction or credit on your state income tax return for contributions to your own state's plan. In some states, this deduction is substantial β€” enough to meaningfully reduce your state tax bill each year you contribute.

If your state offers this benefit, there's often a strong case for using your home state's plan at least partly, even if another state's investment options are slightly better. Run the numbers: a consistent annual state tax deduction can add up over the decade or more you're contributing.

High limits and flexible beneficiaries

529 plans have very high aggregate contribution limits β€” typically several hundred thousand dollars per beneficiary depending on the state, far more than most families will ever reach. There are no annual contribution limits per se, though contributions are treated as gifts for tax purposes, so very large single-year contributions can trigger gift tax considerations. Check current IRS gift tax thresholds if you're considering a large lump-sum contribution.

Importantly, you control the account. If your original beneficiary β€” say, your daughter β€” earns a full scholarship or decides not to attend college, you can change the beneficiary to another qualifying family member with no tax consequence. Siblings, cousins, even yourself can be substituted. You don't lose the account.

Aim at a future number, not today's price

One of the most common planning mistakes is targeting current college costs. If a public university costs $25,000 per year today and college education inflation runs at roughly 3–5% annually, a child born today will face a very different sticker price 18 years from now. Your college savings calculator should factor in inflation β€” aim at a projected future cost, not a today's-dollars number.

A useful rule of thumb: model costs at ~5% annual growth from current published rates, then use a realistic investment return assumption for your portfolio (historically, diversified stock indexes have returned in the 7–10% range before inflation over long periods, but actual returns vary β€” use a conservative estimate for planning). The gap between those two numbers determines how hard your money has to work.

The thirds framework

Financial planners often describe college funding in thirds: roughly one-third from savings accumulated before enrollment, one-third from current income and student wages during the college years, and one-third from student loans or aid. This framework is a sanity check, not a rigid rule β€” but it's useful because it prevents two common errors.

First, it keeps you from over-saving: you don't need to fund 100% of a projected future cost through a 529. Over-funding creates headaches, because excess 529 money withdrawn for non-education purposes is subject to income tax plus a 10% penalty on earnings.

Second, it acknowledges that income and aid will exist. Many families qualify for at least some need-based aid; merit scholarships are also common. Build a plan that doesn't assume zero aid, or you may put yourself under unnecessary financial pressure.

Age-based investing and the glide path

Most 529 plans offer age-based portfolios that automatically shift from aggressive (mostly stocks) to conservative (more bonds and cash) as the child approaches college age. This is similar to a target-date fund for retirement. When your child is 5, the portfolio can weather market downturns β€” there are 13 years to recover. When they're 17, a sudden stock market drop would be devastating if the money is fully in equities.

If you're choosing your own investments rather than an age-based option, manually de-risk the portfolio as enrollment approaches. A common approach: mostly equities in the early years, transitioning to a more conservative mix in the final three to five years before the first tuition payment.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Waiting until the teen years to start β€” even small contributions compounded over 15+ years significantly outperform larger contributions made over 5 years.
  • Over-funding to the point where excess balances become a tax problem β€” calibrate toward the thirds framework.
  • Ignoring your state's tax deduction β€” if your state offers one for contributions to your home-state plan, that's an immediate guaranteed return.
  • Choosing high-fee investment options inside the 529 β€” expense ratios matter over a decade-plus time horizon; compare costs across plan options.
  • Forgetting that 529 money can also cover room and board, not just tuition β€” many families leave qualified expenses on the table and accidentally over-save.

Start small, start now

The math of compound growth rewards early action more than large amounts. Even $50 or $100 per month started at birth can grow substantially by age 18 at reasonable return assumptions. You can always increase contributions as your income grows. The key is to open the account, make your first contribution, and let time do most of the work.

Run the numbers

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