I Started My Child's College Fund... Now What? (2024)

This post is part of a series on College Savings Plans sponsored by CHET, the Connecticut Higher Education Trust’s 529 College Savings Plan. As always, opinions remain 100% my own.

Now that you have started a college fund and are saving money to it every month, what is the best way to invest for college? Read on to learn more about how to select the investment allocations for your child’s college fund, and the investment options offered by CHET that make meeting your investment objectives easy.

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Over the last two months, I’ve outlined how you can set up your child’s college fund in as little as 15 minutes right online with CHET. Then, I showed you how easy it is to set up automatic contributionsstarting as low as $15 every pay period right from your paycheck. The next piece of the puzzle is determining the best way to invest the funds in your 529 plan in order to reach your long-term goal of paying for your child’s college education.

Every family’sinvestment objectives will vary. When setting the investment allocations for your child’s college fund, your objectives will be influenced by three primary factors: your investment horizon, your personal tolerance for risk, and your long-term savings goal.

Let’s examine what each of those factors means, how to determine what your specific preference is for each factor, and how you can use them to choose which investment allocations are right for your child’s college fund. And if all discussion of risk and returns makes your eyes glaze over, skip to the end to see how CHET Age-Based Investment Options make setting your investment allocations super easy for you.

By setting up a CHET 529 College Savings Plan, you have already chosen the right vehicle for investing for your child’s future college education. All the earnings on the funds in your plan can accrue, tax-free, until they are withdrawn. The earnings will remain tax-free forever, so long as the funds are used for qualified educational expenses.

But how do you decide which investment allocations are best for your child’s college fund? With tax considerations removed, you can focus your investment objectives on three primary factors:

  • Your investment horizon
  • Your risk tolerance
  • Your long-term savings goal

These three factors work together to help you determine which investment allocations are right for you and your child’s college fund. Let’s examine each factor in more detail.

Defining Your Investment Horizon

With a college fund, determining your investment horizon is relatively straightforward. Most children go to school the year after they graduate from high school. That defines the investment horizon for your child’s college fund: you have from now until they go to college.

Those years define the investment horizon, or time period, you have to save and invest money to reach your college savings goal.

Your Risk Tolerance

Risk tolerance is a less black and white investment factor. Every family has a different appetite for risk. It can be personality driven, influenced by your overall household income and family wealth, but also may vary with your investment horizon.

Aggressive, Conservative or Moderate

Risk tolerance is typically described as aggressive, conservative or moderate. If you are an aggressive investor, you are willing to take on greater risk, for greater expected returns over the long run. This means your funds may go up and down more than the overall market.

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The return is how much the value of your investment increases between your starting point and an end point. The movement up and down in between is known as volatility – aggressive investors are willing to stomach greater risk, measured as higher volatility, for greater expected returns. Note that I will always say “expected returns”. There are no guarantees when it comes to investing, so taking on higher volatility, also means exposing yourself to greater potential losses.

If you are a conservative investor, you prefer to have less variation and more certainty in your expected returns. You are more focused on preserving your funds, than generating outsized investment returns. This means your funds may go up less than the overall market (lower volatility), but your losses will also likely be less than the market. You accept lower expected returns, for less risk.

If you are a moderate investor, you lie somewhere in between.

A gambler likely has a higher risk tolerance than a penny pincher, who is likely more conservative. If you are trying to reach lofty savings goals relative to the money you can save every month, you may have to be more aggressive with your investment selections to make-up the difference.

Risk Tolerance vs. Investment Choices

So how do specific investment allocation choices align with risk tolerances? The answer is two-fold. There is a risk spectrum along which different asset classes fall, with equities (or stocks) being the riskiest, bonds being more moderate, and cash alternatives (more akin to a savings account paying interest) being most conservative.

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However, within each asset class, there is also a range of risk. There are higher and lower risk equity investments: investing in the S&P 500 has lower volatility, than investing in a smaller cap index, like the Russell 2000. The same is true of bond investments. Investing in US Treasury Bonds is less risky than investing in higher yield, lower credit rating bonds.

By balancing your investment allocation choices across asset classes, no matter where you lie on the risk tolerance spectrum, you also add diversification to your fund portfolio, which reduces overall volatility as well.

Risk Tolerance vs. Investment Horizon

If you are starting a college fund for your baby, with years ahead of you to save, you can make more aggressive investment selections to help you build funds early, while you are also better able to recover from any losses. As they get closer to graduation, it is more important to have certainty in the funds available for college, so you will want to adopt a more conservative investment allocation to preserve your savings.

Long-Term Savings Goal

The final factor to consider when making your investment allocation choices is your long-term savings goal. College is expensive, and the cost of college is growing at a rate that outpaces income growth by multiples today. Establish a long-term savings goal for your child’s college fund that aligns with what you can afford and what you would like to contribute to their college education.

You will reach that goal through a combination of the contributions you make to the fund, as well as the investment returns generated by the money you save, and the years you have to save. You can use my Annuity Calculator to help you triangulate between how much you can contribute to your child’s college fund each year, the expected annual return, and your investment horizon.

CHET offers four categories of investment options: single-fund, multi-funds, guaranteed and age-based. Single fund investment options are invested in a single fund, following a single specific market and/or strategy. Multi-fund investment options are invested across several different funds, achieving specific risk or asset allocation benchmarks (i.e. abalance between stocks and bonds). Guaranteed investment options are essentially providing only interest on your principal, much like a savings account.

Age-Based Funds by CHET

Age-based funds are different from all of the other options. Age-based funds re-balance your asset allocations and investment choices for you based on your child’s age, with more equity exposure (higher risk, higher expected returns) the younger your child is and shifting to more bond and income based strategies (lower risk, lower expected returns and more preservation of capital) as your child near’s their high school graduation. If you choose an age-based investment option, you can choose an aggressive, moderate or conservative investment strategy that applies throughout.

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This year, our middle child turned 5 in August. CHET automatically rolled her account from the 0-4 Years age band to the 5-8 Years age band.For families who want an investment solution that diversifies, re-balances and helps you reach your long-term investment objectives for your child’s college fund, given your risk preferences, Age-based funds are a great solution.

Understanding each of the different factors impacting your long-term investment objectives is complex – and the pressure is greater when you know the decisions you make can affect your child’s future. Hopefully, this helps you understand your risk factors and gives you greater confidence when making the investment allocations for your child’s college fund.

Be sure to catch the rest of my monthly CHET series! Start with how to set up a college fund, thebest way to save money for kids college funds, and coming next month, just in time for the all those questions from the family about what to get your kids for Christmas – how you can allow others to contribute to your child’s college savings too! Follow me atFamily Finance Mom on FacebookandInstagramto catch simple answers to your family’s money questions.

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I Started My Child's College Fund... Now What? (5)

529 plansBaby: 0-12 monthscollege fundElementary: 5-9 yearsPreschool: 3-5 yearsPreteen: 10-13 yearssponsoredTeen: 13+ yearsToddler: 1-3 years

I Started My Child's College Fund... Now What? (2024)

FAQs

How much should you put in your child's college fund? ›

Say you're planning for a child who's 4 years old today. Your college savings goal should be $60,400 for a public, in-state college; $95,600 for a public, out-of-state college; and $118,900 for a private college.

How much should I put in a 529 plan per month? ›

How much to contribute to your kid's 529 each month
  1. For in-state, four-year, public college: minimum $300 per month.
  2. For out-of-state, four-year, public college: minimum $500 per month.
  3. For private, non-profit, four-year college: minimum $650 per month.
Jul 21, 2023

What happens to your 529 if you have no college? ›

Leave the account intact.

If your child is simply not sure about college or perhaps wants to delay applying, you can keep your 529 plan intact until the child does use it for qualified education expenses.

How much money can you put in a 529 per year? ›

529 Plan Contribution Maximums by State
StateMaximum
California$529,000
Colorado$500,000
Connecticut$550,000
Delaware$350,000
47 more rows
Feb 15, 2024

How much is $100 a month in a 529 for 18 years? ›

This chart shows that a monthly contribution of $100 will compound more if you start saving earlier, giving the money more time to grow. If you save $100 a month for 18 years, your ending balance could be $35,400. If you save $100 a month for 9 years, your ending balance could be about $13,900.

What happens to a 529 when a child turns 18? ›

In most states, that means age 18, though in some states the age threshold may be higher. The custodian can't change the beneficiary or account owner. Once the account owner/beneficiary becomes an adult, they assume control over the 529 plan.

What is the 5 year rule for 529 plans? ›

The 5-Year Election

Individuals may contribute as much as $90,000 to a 529 plan in 2024 ($85,000 in 2023) if they treat the contribution as if it were spread over a five-year period. The 5-year election must be reported on Form 709 for each of the five years.

How much should I start a 529 with? ›

529 fact. Remember: You can get started with any dollar amount, and you don't have to cover 100% of the costs yourself. Use our gifting feature to request and receive contributions from loved ones.

What are qualified expenses for a 529 plan? ›

529 qualified expenses
  • College tuition and fees.
  • Vocational and trade school tuition and fees.
  • Elementary or secondary school tuition.
  • Student loans.
  • Off-campus housing.
  • Food and meal plans.
  • Books and supplies.
  • Computers.
Mar 1, 2024

What is the 529 loophole? ›

And thanks to recent legislation, this gift just became even more powerful. The FAFSA Simplification Act brings a lucrative “grandparent loophole” that allows you to contribute generously to a 529 plan without jeopardizing your grandchild's eligibility for financial aid.

Can I convert my 529 to a Roth IRA? ›

As of January 1, 2024, owners of 529 plan accounts can make tax and penalty-free rollovers to Roth IRA retirement plan accounts, subject to certain limitations. This has been welcome news to many families who worried about having unused or leftover funds in a 529 plan account.

What happens to a 529 if kid doesn't go to school? ›

If one child doesn't go to college at all, you can use their funds to pay up to $10,000 in student loans for each of their siblings. Transferring your 529 funds from one beneficiary to another family member is also an option.

What happens to 529 when a child turns 25? ›

Time and Age Limits on 529 College Savings Plans

There are no time or age limits on using a state 529 college savings plan. Money can be kept in a 529 plan indefinitely. 529 plans can be used for graduate school, not just undergraduate school, and can be passed on to one's children.

Can I use my child's 529 for myself? ›

Your 529 can be used for student loan repayment up to a $10,000 lifetime limit per individual. Up to $10,000 annually can be used toward K-12 tuition (per student). You can transfer the funds to another eligible beneficiary, such as another child, a grandchild, yourself or a friend.

Can high income earners contribute to 529? ›

Although contributions to 529 plans do not provide federal tax deductions, many states offer tax benefits such as deductions or credits for contributions. These plans allow for larger contributions, which can help high-income individuals save significant amounts for college expenses.

How much should be in my child's 529? ›

Another rule of thumb for college savings is to have $2,000 saved for each year of your child's life. So, if your child is four years old, you should have at least $8,000 saved. However, a rule of thumb like this is just a rough estimate.

How much does the average parent contribute to college? ›

During the 2021/2022 school year, the average parent covered about 43% of their student's college costs using income and savings. Parents covered an additional 8% of that cost by taking out loans, according to the Sallie Mae study. The average total parent contribution came out to $13,000 per year.

How much money should I have in my account as a college student? ›

If your savings are currently a bit anemic, aim for enough money to cover three to six months of expenses. To put a number to that goal, add up all your regular expenses and multiply the total by at least three. Hopefully, you'll never need to dip into those funds, but if you do, they'll be waiting for you.

What is the best budget rule for college students? ›

Many people use the 50/30/20 rule, which calls for putting 50% of your total after-tax income toward needs, 30% toward wants, and 20% toward savings and other financial goals. This step takes the longest, but getting your finances under control is definitely worth the effort.

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