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Learning, Sharing, and Teaching => Investor Alley => Topic started by: michaelrecycles on June 16, 2013, 02:05:02 PM

Title: 529 vs. brokerage
Post by: michaelrecycles on June 16, 2013, 02:05:02 PM
As detailed in another post (https://forum.mrmoneymustache.com/investor-alley/taxable-account-questions/), I am nearly decided on opening a taxable account. However, recent reading has me curious about 529 plans.

For illustrative purposes, let's just pretend $10k is waiting for a direction to go. My marginal tax rates are 25% federal and 9.3% CA.

Based on the info below, which comes first in your opinion?

529
Taxable
Any thoughts on this decision? To anyone commenting, thanks very much for your time! Let me know if I need to correct or add more information.
Title: Re: 529 vs. brokerage
Post by: Ryan Dagg on June 16, 2013, 02:56:23 PM
In my personal opinion, neither you nor any other Mustachian should contribute to a 529 plan unless they currently have 100% of all future retirement spending funded. I'm still not sure if they are a good idea even if you do. They can be useful automatic savings plans for spendthrifts, but that is an entirely different topic for some other forum.

Why?
1) You don't have any kids yet! Nothing is certain in this world.
2) You have no idea if your kids will need the money. They could get full scholarships, or more likely in my opinion, higher education will have RADICALLY changed by the time they are college age.

There are tectonic shifts happening in education right now and I agree with a lot of brilliant people in the field that there will be ~free education available 20 years from now that is far superior than what is available for ~$70k/yr at MIT, Yale, etc right now.

You should pay yourself first even if I am wrong about future paradigm shifts in education. I'm not a huge Dave Ramsey fan but he does a decent job explaining here: http://www.daveramsey.com/mobile/article-view/category/investing/storyID/retirement-or-college-funding-which-comes-first-/

To back up my education perspective, here are just a few of the organizations that are disrupting eduction right now:
khanacademy.org
udacity.com
edx.org
ocw.mit.edu

These also happen to be excellent Mustachian sources of education.
Title: Re: 529 vs. brokerage
Post by: michaelrecycles on June 16, 2013, 03:12:03 PM
Thank you! You confirmed my suspicions and added some new ideas to the subject. I think I was just guilty of chasing tax advantages...
Title: Re: 529 vs. brokerage
Post by: michaelrecycles on June 16, 2013, 03:13:43 PM
Thank you! You confirmed my suspicions and added some new ideas to the subject. I think I was just guilty of chasing tax advantages...

Or rather, the 529 "advantages" add a hook to the emotional desire to provide.
Title: Re: 529 vs. brokerage
Post by: grantmeaname on June 17, 2013, 07:06:15 AM
You've already maxed out your 401(k)/IRA/etc.?

Are you eligible for an HSA?
Title: Re: 529 vs. brokerage
Post by: michaelrecycles on June 17, 2013, 01:39:27 PM
You've already maxed out your 401(k)/IRA/etc.?

Are you eligible for an HSA?
Roth is maxed, and 401k is on track to be maxed. Once I switch to an HDHP during open enrollment this fall, I will be eligible for an HSA in 2014. The tax man cometh (and taketh away).
Title: Re: 529 vs. brokerage
Post by: Ryan Dagg on June 17, 2013, 06:07:29 PM
Thank you! You confirmed my suspicions and added some new ideas to the subject. I think I was just guilty of chasing tax advantages...

Or rather, the 529 "advantages" add a hook to the emotional desire to provide.
You nailed it. Most people contribute to their children's college expenses before their own retirement because they find the emotional return superior (without realizing this is the reason why).