A Coverdell Education Savings Account (ESA) is an account created as
an incentive to help parents and students save for education expenses.
The total contributions for the beneficiary of this account cannot
be more than $2,000 in any year, no matter how many accounts have been
established. A beneficiary is someone who is under age 18 or is a
special needs beneficiary.
Contributions to a Coverdell ESA are not deductible, but amounts
deposited in the account grow tax free until distributed. The
beneficiary will not owe tax on the distributions if they are less than
a beneficiary’s qualified education expenses at an eligible
institution. This benefit applies to qualified higher education
expenses as well as to qualified elementary and secondary education
expenses.
Here are some things to remember about Distributions from Coverdell Accounts:
- Distributions are tax-free as long as they are used for qualified
education expenses, such as tuition and fees, required books, supplies
and equipment and qualified expenses for room and board.
- There is no tax on distributions if they are for enrollment or
attendance at an eligible educational institution. This includes any
public, private or religious school that provides elementary or
secondary education as determined under state law. Eligible
institutions also include any college, university, vocational school or
other postsecondary educational institution eligible to participate in
a student aid program administered by the Department of Education.
Virtually all accredited public, nonprofit, and proprietary (privately
owned profit-making) postsecondary institutions are eligible.
- The Hope and lifetime learning credits can be claimed in the same
year the beneficiary takes a tax-free distribution from a Coverdell
ESA, as long as the same expenses are not used for both benefits.
- If the distribution exceeds qualified education expenses, a
portion will be taxable to the beneficiary and will usually be subject
to an additional 10% tax. Exceptions to the additional 10% tax
include the death or disability of the beneficiary or if the
beneficiary receives a qualified scholarship.
There are contribution limits for taxpayers based on the
contributor’s Modified Adjusted Gross Income. Contributions to a
Coverdell ESA may be made until the due date of the contributor’s
return, without extensions.
If there is a balance in the Coverdell ESA when the beneficiary
reaches age 30, it must generally be distributed within 30 days. The
portion representing earnings on the account will be taxable and
subject to the additional 10% tax. The beneficiary may avoid these
taxes by rolling over the full balance to another Coverdell ESA for
another family member. For more details, see IRS Publication 970, Tax
Benefits for Higher Education (at IRS.gov) or call 800-TAX-FORM
(800-829-3676).
Remember that for the genuine IRS Web site be sure to use
.gov. Don't be confused by internet sites that end in .com, .net,
.org or other designations instead of .gov. The address of the official
IRS governmental Web site is www.irs.gov.