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Achieving Your College-savings Goals

Understanding the Keys to Success

By David F. Woods, CLU, ChFC

Pages:  1  

With college costs continuing to skyrocket, parents need to plan earlier and more carefully than ever before to achieve their college-savings goals. Meeting this challenge requires a disciplined approach to saving and investing.

But having a smart investment strategy is just one part of a sound college-funding plan. You also need a smart risk management strategy to ensure that your college-savings goals will be achieved, even if you're not able to complete them due to illness, accident or death.

Saving and Investing for College

Federal- and state-sponsored college savings programs are increasing in popularity because they let you save and withdraw tax-free. Education IRAs, now called Coverdell Education Savings Accounts, let you contribute $2,000 annually per child, but phase out contributions at higher income levels. Section 529 plans, a more flexible option, permit much larger contributions (more than $200,000 per beneficiary in most states) and generally have no income restrictions. Permanent life insurance is another option to consider because it too allows you to save and withdraw tax-free, while also providing the protection you should be building into your college-savings plan (see below). Because of the insurance component, however, your costs may be somewhat higher than with, say, a Section 529 Plan.

Protecting Your College Savings Plan

Protection products form the foundation of a sound college-funding program, ensuring that your college savings plan won't die or become disabled if you do. Life insurance can complete a college-savings program that hasn't matured, while disability insurance can help make sure that you can continue to set aside money for college, even if you're unable to work for a period of time.

Remember, a college-funding plan without insurance is a savings and investment program that's at risk.


Pages:  1  

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