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Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Dan Caplinger :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Best Way to Save for College
by Dan Caplinger
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Saving used to be so much simpler. No matter what particular goal you were saving for, you did the same thing: put money aside and figured out how to invest it.

Nowadays, you'll have to learn about special types of accounts designed for particular savings goals. Want to save for retirement? You'll need to decide whether a 401(k) or 403(b) planfrom your employer beats out the benefits of a Roth or traditional IRA. And in the college savings realm, 529 plans are attractive, but choosing among your many plan options gets a lot trickier.

Alternatives to 529s
There are ways to save for college other than using 529 plans. Opening a custodial accountfor your child is easy, but many parents aren't comfortable with turning over the money to their children when they become adults. A Coverdell ESAhas many of the same attributes as an IRA, but contributions are limited to $2,000 per child annually -- a pittance compared to the cost of a college education these days.

529 plansbring the best combination of desirable traits to help you save for college costs. Once you contribute to a 529 plan, the income grows on a tax-deferred basis. When the time comes, as long as you spend the money on qualified educational expenses, that income becomes tax-free. Contribution limits are huge, letting you contribute $200,000 or more in total for each child.

What to look for
The tricky part, however, is choosing from the dozens of 529 plans available. Every state in the union offers a 529 plan, and most of them are open to people from anywhere in the nation.

To find the best 529, here are some of the things you should look for:

Low fees. High-priced 529 plan options are sadly quite common, but there are enough alternatives so that you shouldn't have to waste money on costly plans. Flexible investment options. You'll want enough choices to put together a solid, diversified long-term portfolio. Good performance. Saving for college doesn't give you much time to recover from mediocre or bad returns. Even if you start saving immediately after your child is born, you have less than 20 years for your money to grow enough to finance your child's education. Don't waste that time on subpar results. Tax benefits. Many state 529 plans offer tax breaks to in-state residents, such as income tax deductions. It's always worth it to take a look at your own state's plan first, although you may end up deciding that it's not the best choice, even despite some tax advantages.

Let's take a look at a couple of different plans to get a feel for what's available.

Good, bad, or ugly
One 529 plan I like is Ohio's CollegeAdvantage Plan. It offers a range of different investments, ranging from age-based options that look a lot like target retirement funds for future college students to investments in various stock funds from Vanguard and other providers. Take a look at some of the choices:

Investment

Cost

1-Year Return

Holdings of Fund Include ...

Vanguard Windsor II

0.48%

(10.3%)

IBM (NYSE: IBM), JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT)

Vanguard Morgan Growth

0.48%

(10.1%) Continued...

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About The Author

Dan Caplinger is a contract writer for The Motley Fool.

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