Pub. 17, Chapter 18 - Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs)
You may be able to contribute up to $500 each year to an education
individual retirement account (education IRA or Ed IRA) for a child
under age 18. Contributions to an education IRA are not deductible.
Any individual (including the child) can contribute to a child's
education IRA if the individual's modified adjusted gross income
(defined later) is less than $110,000 ($160,000 on a joint return).
The $500 maximum contribution for each contributor is gradually
reduced if the individual's modified adjusted gross income is between
$95,000 and $110,000 (between $150,000 and $160,000 on a joint
return). See Who Can Contribute to an Education IRA?,
later.
There is no limit on the number of education IRAs that can be
established designating the same child as the beneficiary. However,
total contributions for the child during any tax year cannot be
more than $500.
Amounts deposited in the accounts grow tax free until distributed
(withdrawn).
If, for a year, withdrawals from an account are not more than a
child's qualified higher education expenses (defined later)
at an eligible educational institution (defined later), the
withdrawals are not taxable. See Distributions, later, for
more information.
What Is an Education IRA?
An education IRA is not a retirement arrangement. It is a trust or
custodial account created only for the purpose of paying the
qualified higher education expenses (defined later) of the
designated beneficiary of the account. To be treated as an education
IRA, the account must be designated as an education IRA when it is
created. It must be created or organized in the United States.
Account requirements.
The document creating and governing the
account must be in writing and must satisfy certain requirements. See Publication
590.
Designated beneficiary.
The designated beneficiary is the individual
on whose behalf the trust or custodial account has been established.
Qualified higher education expenses.
These are expenses required
for the enrollment or attendance of the designated beneficiary at an eligible
educational institution. The following are qualified higher education
expenses.
- Tuition.
- Fees.
- Books.
- Supplies.
- Equipment.
- Amounts contributed to a qualified state tuition program.
State tuition programs are discussed in Publication 970,
Tax
Benefits for Higher Education.
- Room and board if the designated beneficiary is at least a
half-time student at an eligible educational institution. A student is
enrolled at least half-time if he or she is enrolled for at least half
the full-time academic workload for the course of study the student is
pursuing as determined under the standards of the institution where
the student is enrolled. Room and board is limited to:
- The school's posted room and board charge for students
living on-campus, or
- $2,500 each year for students living off-campus and not at
home.
Eligible educational institution.
This is any college, university, vocational school, or other
postsecondary educational institution eligible to participate in the
student aid programs administered by the Department of Education. It
includes virtually any accredited public, nonprofit, or proprietary
(privately owned profit-making) postsecondary institution.
Who Can Contribute to an Education IRA?
Any individual (including the designated beneficiary) can
contribute to a child's education IRA if the individual's modified
adjusted gross income (discussed later) for the tax year is less than
$110,000 ($160,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly).
Contributions can be made to one or several education IRAs for the
same child provided that the total contributions are not more than the
contribution limit (defined later) for a tax year.
Qualified state tuition program.
No contributions can be made to an education IRA on behalf of a beneficiary
if any amount is contributed during the tax year to a qualified state
tuition program on behalf of the same beneficiary. For more information
on state tuition programs see Publication
970.
Contribution Limits
There are two yearly limits, one on the total amount that can be
contributed for each designated beneficiary (child) and one on the
amount that any individual can contribute for any one child for a
year.
Limit for each child.
The total of all contributions to all education
IRAs set up for the benefit of any one designated beneficiary (child) cannot
be more than $500 for a tax year. This includes contributions (other than rollovers)
to all the child's education IRAs from all sources. Rollovers are discussed
at Can Education IRA Assets Be Moved?, later.
Limit for each contributor.
You can contribute up to $500 for
each child for any tax year. This is the most you can contribute for the benefit
of any one child for any year, regardless of the number of education IRAs set
up for the child. This limit may be reduced as explained next.
Reduced limit for certain contributors.
If your modified
adjusted gross income (defined later) is between $95,000 and $110,000
(between $150,000 and $160,000 if filing a joint return), your $500 limit for
each child is gradually reduced. If your modified adjusted income is $110,000
or more ($160,000 or more if filing a joint return), you cannot contribute to
anyone's education IRA. See Publication
590 for more information.
Modified adjusted gross income.
Your modified adjusted gross
income for the purpose of determining the contribution limit is the adjusted
gross income shown on your return, increased by the following exclusions from
your income.
- Foreign earned income of U.S. citizens or residents living
abroad.
- Housing costs of U.S. citizens or residents living
abroad.
- Income from sources within:
- Puerto Rico,
- Guam,
- American Samoa, or
- The Northern Mariana Islands.
Additional tax on excess contributions.
A 6% excise tax applies
each year to excess contributions that are in an education IRA at the end of
the year. Excess contributions are the total of the following
three amounts.
- Contributions to any child's education IRAs for the year
that are more than $500 (or, if less, the total of each contributor's
limit for the year, as discussed earlier).
- All contributions to a child's education IRA for the year if
any amount is also contributed during the year to a qualified state
tuition program on behalf of the same child. However, amounts
withdrawn from the education IRA to be contributed to the qualified
state tuition program are not excess contributions.
- Excess contributions for the preceding year, reduced by the
total of the following:
- Withdrawals (other than those rolled over as discussed
later) made during the year, and
- The contribution limit for the current year minus the amount
contributed for the current year.
When contributions can be made.
You can make contributions to
an education IRA for a year at any time during the year. The last day you can
make a contribution for 1999 is December 31, 1999.
Other contribution rules.
You can contribute only cash to an
education IRA. You cannot contribute to an education IRA after the beneficiary
reaches age 18.
Can Education IRA Assets Be Moved?
You can roll over assets from one education IRA to another. You can
also change the designated beneficiary or transfer the beneficiary's
interest to a spouse or former spouse.
Rollovers
Any amount withdrawn from an education IRA and rolled over to
another education IRA for the benefit of the same designated
beneficiary or member of the designated beneficiary's family is not
taxable. This rule applies only if the beneficiary of the new IRA is
under age 30 on the date of the rollover contribution to the new IRA.
An amount is rolled over if it is paid to another education IRA
within 60 days after the date of the withdrawal.
Members of the beneficiary's family.
The beneficiary's spouse
and the following individuals (and their spouses) are members of the designated
beneficiary's family.
- The beneficiary's child, grandchild, or stepchild.
- A brother, sister, stepbrother or stepsister of the
beneficiary.
- A son or daughter of the beneficiary's brother or
sister.
- The father, mother, grandfather, grandmother, stepfather or
stepmother of the beneficiary.
- A brother or sister of the beneficiary's father or
mother.
- The beneficiary's son-in-law, daughter-in-law,
father-in-law, mother-in-law, brother-in-law or sister-in-law.
Only
one rollover per education IRA is allowed during the 12-month period
ending on the date of the payment or distribution.
Changing the Designated Beneficiary
The designated beneficiary can be changed to certain members of the
beneficiary's family (listed earlier). There are no tax consequences
if, at the time of the change, the new beneficiary is under age 30.
Transfer Because of Divorce
The transfer of a designated beneficiary's interest in an education
IRA to his or her spouse or former spouse under a divorce or
separation instrument is not a taxable transfer. After the transfer,
the interest will be treated as an education IRA in which the spouse
or former spouse is the designated beneficiary.
Are Withdrawals Taxable?
Withdrawals that are not more than the designated beneficiary's qualified higher
education expenses during the year are generally tax free. The portion
of any withdrawal that is more than the education expenses may be taxable.
What Determines the Tax Treatment of Withdrawals?
The tax treatment of distributions (withdrawals) from an education
IRA depends, in part, on the qualified higher education expenses that
a designated beneficiary has in a tax year.
Distribution not more than expenses.
Generally, a withdrawal
is tax free if it is not more than the designated beneficiary's qualified higher
education expenses in a tax year.
You
cannot take a tax deduction or credit for educational expenses you use
as the basis for a tax-free withdrawal from an education IRA.
Waiver of tax-free treatment.
If you are the designated beneficiary, you can waive the tax-free
treatment of the education IRA distribution and elect to pay any tax
that would otherwise be owed on the distribution. You or your parents
may then be eligible to claim a Hope credit or lifetime learning
credit for qualified higher education expenses paid with the
distribution in that tax year.
Distributions more than expenses.
Generally, if the total withdrawals
for a tax year are more than the qualified higher education expenses, a portion
of the amount withdrawn is taxable and the beneficiary must include it in income.
For more information, see Publication
590.
Additional tax.
Generally, if you receive a taxable distribution,
you must pay a 10% additional tax on the amount you must include
in income.
Exceptions.
There are exceptions to the 10% additional tax for special situations
such as the death or disability of the designated beneficiary. For more
information, see Publication 590.
When Must Education IRA Assets Be Distributed?
Generally, any assets remaining in an education IRA must
be withdrawn when either one of the following two events occurs.
- The designated beneficiary reaches age 30. In this case, the
designated beneficiary must withdraw the remaining assets within 30
days after he or she reaches age 30.
- The designated beneficiary dies before reaching age 30. In
this case, the remaining assets must generally be distributed within
30 days after the date of death.
The withdrawn earnings that accumulated tax free in the
account, generally, must be included in taxable income.
Exception for transfer to surviving spouse or family member.
If an education IRA is transferred to a surviving spouse or other
family member (defined earlier) under age 30 as a result of the death
of the designated beneficiary, the education IRA retains its status.
This means that the spouse or other family member is treated as the
designated beneficiary of the education IRA. There are no income tax
consequences as a result of the transfer.
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