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IRS Releases Guidance on Law Changes Related to 529 Plans

In Notice 2018-58 the IRS clarified various issues related to changes Congress made in the PATH Act and the Tax Cut and Jobs Act to §529 Education Savings Plan (a “qualified tuition program” or QTP).

Taking the oldest change first, the IRS clarified some issues related to the ability of a taxpayer to return funds to a §529 plan if the taxpayer receives a refund of qualified education expenses.[1] As the IRS notes “This could occur, for example, if the beneficiary were to drop a class mid-semester.”

The Notice goes on to describe this provision in the law:

Section 529(c)(3)(D) provides that the portion of such a distribution refunded to an individual who is the beneficiary of a QTP by an eligible educational institution is not subject to income tax to the extent that the refund is recontributed to a QTP of which that individual is the beneficiary not later than 60 days after the date of such refund and does not exceed the refunded amount. Section 529(c)(3)(D) applies to refunds received after December 31, 2014. The PATH Act also included a transition rule with regard to the deadline for recontributing a refund received after 2014 but before the date of enactment (December 18, 2015). Specifically, those refunded distributions are exempt from income tax if they were recontributed to the beneficiary's QTP not later than February 16, 2016 (60 days after the date of enactment of the PATH Act).

The IRS had been made aware by QTP administrators of a potential issue with such rollovers:

The Treasury Department and the IRS are aware of concerns expressed by QTP administrators regarding the administrative burdens that would arise if a recontribution of a refunded QHEE is treated in the same manner as a rollover under Notice 2001-81 requiring a breakdown of the earnings portion of the recontribution. Because the amount is refunded by the eligible educational institution, which will have no information regarding the income portion of each tuition payment (whether made from a single or multiple QTPs), QTP administrators generally would be unable to determine the earnings portion of the recontribution.

The IRS provides in this Notice that it will provide relief from this problem in upcoming guidance:

Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS intend to issue regulations providing that the entire recontributed amount will be treated as principal. This rule of administrative convenience will eliminate the burdens associated with determining the earnings portion. Furthermore, because the recontributed amount previously was taken into account in applying the overall contribution limit under § 529(b)(6), the Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate that the regulations will provide that the recontributed amount does not count against the limit on contributions on behalf of the designated beneficiary under § 529(b)(6). In addition, consistent with § 529(c)(3)(D), the Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate that the regulations will confirm that the recontribution must be to a QTP for the benefit of the designated beneficiary who received the refund of QHEEs, although the recontribution need not be to the QTP from which the distributions for the QHEEs were made.

The Notice also deals with two provisions found in the law normally referred to as the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act” (TCJA).  The IRS refers to this as the “2017 Act” because the formal title of the bill was removed from the Conference Bill due to Byrd Rule issues in the Senate.

The first TCJA provision relates to rollovers to ABLE accounts.  As the Notice describes this provision:

The 2017 Act added § 529(c)(3)(C)(i)(III) which provides that a distribution from a QTP made after December 22, 2017, and before January 1, 2026, is not subject to income tax if, within 60 days of the distribution, it is transferred to an ABLE account (as defined in § 529A(e)(6))2 of the designated beneficiary or a member of the family of the designated beneficiary. Under § 529(c)(3)(C)(i), the amount of any rollover to an ABLE account is limited to the amount that, when added to all other contributions made to the ABLE account for the taxable year, does not exceed the contribution limit for the ABLE account under § 529A(b)(2)(B)(i), i.e., the annual gift tax exclusion amount under § 2503(b).

The IRS announces what they expect to include in the regulations implementing this new option:

In accordance with new § 529(c)(3)(C)(i)(III), the Treasury Department and the IRS intend to issue regulations providing that a distribution from a QTP made after December 22, 2017, and before January 1, 2026, to the ABLE account of the designated beneficiary of that QTP, or of a member of the family of that designated beneficiary, is not subject to income tax if two requirements are satisfied. First, the distributed funds must be contributed to the ABLE account within 60 days after their withdrawal from the QTP. Second, the distribution, when added to all other contributions made to the ABLE account for the taxable year that are subject to the limitation under § 529A(b)(2)(B)(i) (the annual gift tax exclusion under § 2503(b)), must not exceed that limitation. Specifically, the regulations are expected to provide that the sum of the distribution and all other contributions to the ABLE account for the taxable year, other than contributions of the designated beneficiary’s compensation as described in § 529A(b)(2)(B)(ii), must not exceed the annual gift tax exclusion for that taxable year. Consistent with the longstanding approach of treating direct transfers similarly to rollovers in Notice 2001-81, the Treasury Department and the IRS also anticipate that the regulations will provide that the same rules will apply regardless of whether such a QTP distribution is rolled over to an ABLE account or instead is transferred by a direct transfer from a QTP to an ABLE account.

The Notice goes on to warn about the consequences of exceeding those limits and what the regulations will do to attempt to limit the chances of the problem occurring:

To the extent that a direct transfer (or, in the case of a rollover, a contribution of the distributed amount) would cause the contribution limit under § 529A(b)(2)(B)(i) to be exceeded, it would be subject to income tax and a 10% additional tax under § 529(c)(6), if applicable. Therefore, the Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate that the regulations will require a QTP to prohibit the direct transfer of any amount that would cause the limit under § 529A(b)(2)(B)(i) to be exceeded. Furthermore, a qualified ABLE program is prohibited from accepting certain contributions in excess of the limitations applicable to ABLE accounts, and any violation of those rules could cause the designated beneficiary to incur tax, and could impact adversely the ABLE beneficiary's eligibility for certain public benefits.

The regulations will also deal with how a rejected transfer will be treated when funds are returned to the QTP:

The Treasury Department and the IRS encourage the QTP designated beneficiary, in the case of a rollover, or the QTP, in the case of a direct transfer, to contact the qualified ABLE program before contributing any funds to the ABLE account to ensure that the § 529A(b)(2)(B)(i) limit will not be exceeded. However, the Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate that the regulations will provide that, in the case of a direct transfer, any excess contribution that is rejected by the qualified ABLE program and returned to the QTP will not be deemed to be a new contribution to the QTP for purposes of the § 529(b)(6) contribution limit.

The IRS also clarifies that the “member of the family” rules will be by reference to the QTP rules of §529 rather than the more restrictive family member listing for ABLE accounts:

Further, the Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate that the regulations will specify that, for purposes of identifying the ABLE accounts permitted to receive such a rollover from a designated beneficiary's QTP, a member of the family of the designated beneficiary means a member of the family as defined in § 529(e)(2), rather than the more limited definition in § 529A(e)(4) that applies for purposes of qualified ABLE programs.

The final issue the Notice deals with is expansion of qualified expenses to include primary and secondary education tuition expense.  That provision is summarized by the IRS as follows:

In addition, the 2017 Act expanded the definition of QHEEs to include tuition in connection with the designated beneficiary's enrollment or attendance at an elementary or secondary public, private, or religious school. See § 529(c)(7). The 2017 Act also amended § 529(e)(3)(A) to limit the total amount of these tuition distributions for each designated beneficiary to $10,000 per year from all QTPs of the designated beneficiary. Both amendments apply to distributions made after December 31, 2017.

The IRS’s expected rules for these amounts are described as follows:

Consistent with new § 529(c)(7) and (e)(3)(A), respectively, the Treasury Department and the IRS anticipate that the regulations will provide that QHEEs include tuition in connection with the designated beneficiary's enrollment or attendance at an elementary or secondary public, private, or religious school, but that such QHEEs are limited to a total of $10,000 per year per designated beneficiary, regardless of the number of QTPs making such distributions for that same designated beneficiary. The Treasury Department and IRS intend to issue regulations defining the term “elementary or secondary” to mean kindergarten through grade 12 as determined under State law, consistent with the definition applicable for Coverdell education savings accounts in § 530(b)(3)(B). Coverdell education savings accounts are another type of tax-favored savings account governed under § 530 and also may be established to pay for tuition and other expenses in connection with enrollment or attendance at an elementary or secondary public, private, or religious school. Applying the same definition to both a QTP and a Coverdell education savings account will facilitate the allocation of expenses between those two accounts as is required by § 530(d)(2)(C)(ii) if a designated beneficiary receives distributions from both a QTP and a Coverdell education savings account and those total distributions exceed the designated beneficiary's qualified expenses.


[1] IRC §529(c)(3)(D)