Christian Posted March 11, 2023 Report Posted March 11, 2023 Another client made a withdrawal from a remaining 529 Plan she has saying it was used to fund her daughter's tuition expenses. Her daughter decided to claim herself last year and the distribution is (of course) shown payable to Mama. Unless greatly mistaken this is another forbidden transaction and Mom will pay regular and penalty tax on the earnings ? Quote
Christian Posted March 11, 2023 Author Report Posted March 11, 2023 The term non-qualified distribution is a better descriptive of this I guess. ATX does not make reporting this all that easy. Quote
Lee B Posted March 11, 2023 Report Posted March 11, 2023 As long as the mother used the distribution to pay her daughters qualified education expenses, I don't believe there is a problem. 529 Plan beneficiaries are not required to be dependents, they can be grandchildren or they can be unrelated. Â 7 Quote
TexTaxToo Posted March 11, 2023 Report Posted March 11, 2023 2 hours ago, cbslee said: As long as the mother used the distribution to pay her daughters qualified education expenses That's assuming the daughter is the designated beneficiary. If the mother is the beneficiary, you cannot use the distribution to pay someone else's expenses (the exception now is that up to $10,000 can be used to pay off a student loan of a sibling of the beneficiary). The mother could have changed the beneficiary to the daughter before withdrawing the money. I don't know if it is possible to fix it after the fact. 2 Quote
Christian Posted March 12, 2023 Author Report Posted March 12, 2023 Well that clarifies that. Â Quote
Christian Posted March 14, 2023 Author Report Posted March 14, 2023 Well maybe not. The mother's name is shown on the withdrawal form. Usually a dependent's name is on the ones I have seen over the years. I have only the mom's statement as to how the funds were spent so I am leaving it up to the Service to decide if there has been a misstep. Quote
Lee B Posted March 14, 2023 Report Posted March 14, 2023 I On 3/11/2023 at 2:28 PM, TexTaxToo said: That's assuming the daughter is the designated beneficiary. If the mother is the beneficiary, you cannot use the distribution to pay someone else's expenses (the exception now is that up to $10,000 can be used to pay off a student loan of a sibling of the beneficiary). The mother could have changed the beneficiary to the daughter before withdrawing the money. I don't know if it is possible to fix it after the fact. The name and ssn on the 1098 T and the 1099 Q need to match.  Quote
TexTaxToo Posted March 15, 2023 Report Posted March 15, 2023 16 hours ago, cbslee said: The name and ssn on the 1098 T and the 1099 Q need to match. Not sure that's true. From the 1099-Q instructions: Quote QTP: List the designated beneficiary as the recipient only if the distribution is made (a) directly to the designated beneficiary, or (b) to an eligible educational institution for the benefit of the designated beneficiary. Otherwise, list the account owner as the recipient of the distribution. Box 6 should tell you if the recipient is the designated beneficiary. 2 Quote
Lee B Posted March 15, 2023 Report Posted March 15, 2023 On 3/11/2023 at 2:28 PM, TexTaxToo said: That's assuming the daughter is the designated beneficiary. If the mother is the beneficiary, you cannot use the distribution to pay someone else's expenses (the exception now is that up to $10,000 can be used to pay off a student loan of a sibling of the beneficiary). The mother could have changed the beneficiary to the daughter before withdrawing the money. I don't know if it is possible to fix it after the fact.  1 minute ago, TexTaxToo said: Not sure that's true. From the 1099-Q instructions: Box 6 should tell you if the recipient is the designated beneficiary. I am confused comparing your 2 posts. Quote
TexTaxToo Posted March 15, 2023 Report Posted March 15, 2023 Most financial institutions that have 529 accounts allow anyone to open a 529 account for any beneficiary. The person who opens and controls the account is usually referred to as the "account owner". This has caused some confusion, since the law itself makes no provision for an "account owner" who is not the designated beneficiary. If Box 6 on the 1099-Q is NOT checked, then the recipient is the beneficiary and you are correct that it should match the 1098-T.  But if Box 6 is checked, the recipient is the account owner who is not the designated beneficiary.  But the proceeds must still be used for qualified expenses of the designated beneficiary to be tax-free. 4 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.