---
title: "What Is a 529 Plan? A Guide to Tax-Free Education Savings"
description: "A 529 plan lets families invest after-tax money that grows and comes out tax-free for education. Here's how the accounts work, what counts as a qualified expense, and the newer option to roll leftover funds into a Roth IRA."
category: "Personal Finance"
category_url: https://boursel.com/category/personal-finance
author: "Priya Venkatesan"
published: 2026-06-26T14:48:00.000Z
updated: 2026-06-26T14:48:00.000Z
canonical: https://boursel.com/article/what-is-a-529-plan-a-guide-to-tax-free-education-savings
tags: ["529-plan", "education-savings", "college", "taxes", "personal-finance"]
---
# What Is a 529 Plan? A Guide to Tax-Free Education Savings

A 529 plan lets families invest after-tax money that grows and comes out tax-free for education. Here's how the accounts work, what counts as a qualified expense, and the newer option to roll leftover funds into a Roth IRA.

*This is general information, not tax or financial advice. Check IRS.gov for current limits.*

College is one of the biggest bills a family faces. A 529 plan is the tax code's main tool for saving toward it.

## What a 529 is

A **529 plan** is a tax-advantaged investment account for education, named after Section 529 of the tax code and sponsored by states (you can use most states' plans and spend at eligible schools nationwide). The deal works like a Roth IRA for education: you put in **after-tax** money, it **grows tax-free**, and **withdrawals are tax-free** when spent on qualified education costs, [per the IRS](https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/529-plans-questions-and-answers). Many states add a state income-tax deduction or credit for contributions.

There are two kinds. **Education savings plans** (the common type) invest in funds that rise and fall with markets. **Prepaid tuition plans** let you lock in today's tuition rates at participating public colleges, with less flexibility.

## What counts as a qualified expense

For college: tuition, fees, books, supplies, and room and board at eligible schools. Beyond that, the rules have widened: up to **$10,000 a year** for K-12 tuition (a 2025 federal law raised this and broadened it starting in 2026 — check current IRS guidance), registered **apprenticeship** costs, and up to **$10,000 lifetime per beneficiary** toward **student-loan** repayment. Spend the money on anything else and the **earnings** portion owes income tax plus a **10% penalty** (the penalty hits gains, not your original contributions).

## Contribution rules

There's no annual federal cap, but contributions count as **gifts**: the 2025–2026 annual gift-tax exclusion is **$19,000 per donor per beneficiary** ($38,000 for a couple) before you must file a gift-tax form. States set high aggregate ceilings — often **$235,000 to $600,000+** per beneficiary. A special **"superfunding"** election lets a donor front-load **five years** of gifts at once — up to **$95,000** ($190,000 per couple) — without triggering a filing, as long as no other gifts go to that beneficiary for five years.

## Flexibility and the new Roth rollover

A useful feature: you can **change the beneficiary** to another family member tax-free, so the money isn't stranded if one child skips college or wins a scholarship. And under the **SECURE 2.0 Act**, since 2024 you can roll **unused 529 funds into the beneficiary's Roth IRA** — up to **$35,000 lifetime**, [Fidelity explains](https://www.fidelity.com/learning-center/personal-finance/529-rollover-to-roth) — subject to conditions: the 529 must be **at least 15 years old**, only contributions older than five years qualify, annual rollovers can't exceed that year's Roth limit, and the beneficiary needs earned income.

## The downsides

- **Financial aid:** a parent-owned 529 is counted as a parental asset on the FAFSA, trimming aid eligibility by up to ~5.6% of its value.
- **Investment risk:** savings-plan balances can fall with markets and may not keep pace with tuition.
- **Fees vary** by state plan — compare before opening.

## Practical tips

Start early — tax-free compounding rewards time. Check whether **your state** offers a tax break for its own plan (more than 30 do), since that can outweigh another state's investment options. Keep receipts to prove withdrawals matched qualified expenses. And remember the limits — gift exclusion, K-12 cap, Roth-rollover rules — are set by statute and change, so verify current figures at IRS.gov or with a tax professional before acting.

## Sources

- [529 Plans: Questions and Answers](https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/529-plans-questions-and-answers)
- [Understanding 529 rollovers to a Roth IRA](https://www.fidelity.com/learning-center/personal-finance/529-rollover-to-roth)

