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Lucky You: Grandparents Want to Help

If you are among those fortunate individuals whose parents want to help pay for their grandchild’s education, it’s worth figuring out the best way for them to do so in order to avoid the law of unintended consequences. In the college world, unintended consequences include losing financial aid as a result of a grandparent’s gift.

First, you need to know how grandparent (or other extended family) assets are treated by the aid formulas. Good news: Grandparent-owned 529 or other savings accounts do not need to be reported as assets on either the FAFSA or CSS PROFILE. Bad news: Once that money gets spent, it is treated as student income which needs to be reported on next year’s FAFSA or CSS PROFILE. This could lead to an increase in your EFC and a reduction in any need-based aid that your student is receiving, because student income is assessed at 50% in the aid formulas. So Grandma’s $10,000 tuition payment could cost the student $5,000 in lost aid.

What’s a generous grandparent to do? Several possibilities:

Extremely generous grandparents should know this: Tuition payments made directly to a college are exempt from gift tax, no matter the amount, as long as the payments go directly to the educational institution. Note that only tuition payments count; money given for room, board, books and other fees would be subject to the annual exclusion or lifetime exemption.

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