dcfromva
No horsing around, Christmas is coming!
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2002
- Messages
- 3,283
I think using a Roth for college expenses is a pretty clever idea for some folks--especially in the case where the child may be on the fence post about whether they plan to go to college and where the parents have other retirement savings and only plan to use the Roth as "frosting on the cake" and would be fine without it.
The only hesitation I could think of is that one of the strengths of a Roth is the longer you hold the account (and assuming you are making a good rate of return), the more you will realize tax savings over time. Typically, college money is needed in 18-22 years after the child is born vrs retirement money which could be held for 40 years or more. The amount you can contribute to the Roth is finite--once you pass up the deadline for making a contribution, you can't go back. Thus, you could be using up a pretty powerful hedge against higher taxes on retirement money held in the future if you use up your Roth account to fund college.
(But if your child doesn't use the 529 money for a qualified expense, paying taxes plus a 10% penalty on the earnings on the 529 plan would not be any fun, either....
)
-DC
The only hesitation I could think of is that one of the strengths of a Roth is the longer you hold the account (and assuming you are making a good rate of return), the more you will realize tax savings over time. Typically, college money is needed in 18-22 years after the child is born vrs retirement money which could be held for 40 years or more. The amount you can contribute to the Roth is finite--once you pass up the deadline for making a contribution, you can't go back. Thus, you could be using up a pretty powerful hedge against higher taxes on retirement money held in the future if you use up your Roth account to fund college.
(But if your child doesn't use the 529 money for a qualified expense, paying taxes plus a 10% penalty on the earnings on the 529 plan would not be any fun, either....

-DC
