How to Change the Beneficiary on Your 529 Plan

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Kathryn Flynn

By Kathryn Flynn

September 3, 2024

529 plans are designed to help save for the future education costs of a single beneficiary. However, the 529 plan account owner may change the beneficiary to a qualifying family member of the current beneficiary at any time without the tax consequences of a non-qualified withdrawal by completing a form on the 529 plan’s website.

Can a 529 plan have more than one beneficiary?

A 529 plan can have only one beneficiary. Distributions must be used to pay for qualified education expenses incurred by the designated beneficiary. Non-qualified distributions are subject to income tax and a 10% penalty on the earnings portion of the withdrawal, plus a possible recapture of state income tax breaks attributable to the non-qualified distribution.

Families with more than one child may use a single 529 plan to save for college, but they can take qualified distributions for only one child at a time. After they are finished paying for college for the first child, the parents should change the 529 plan beneficiary to the next child attending college. 

Grandchildren, nieces, nephews or anyone else with future education costs may be also named as a designated 529 plan beneficiary. Sometimes it makes sense for the 529 plan account owner and the beneficiary to be the same person, such as when an adult is saving for their own graduate school or when an expecting parent wants to start saving for college before their child is born.

Parents may change a 529 plan beneficiary if the original beneficiary decides not to go to college or has leftover funds in the 529 plan account after graduation.

Do you have to pay taxes if you change a 529 plan beneficiary?

When you change a 529 plan beneficiary to a member of the beneficiary’s family, this is not considered a non-qualified withdrawal and, therefore, not subject to tax penalties and tax on plan earnings. Qualified family members include the beneficiary’s:

  1. Spouse
  2. Son, daughter, stepchild, foster child, adopted child or a descendent 
  3. Son-in-law, daughter-in-law
  4. Siblings or step-siblings
  5. Brother-in-law, sister-in-law
  6. Father-in-law, mother-in-law
  7. Father or mother or ancestor of either, stepmother, stepfather
  8. Aunt, uncle or their spouse
  9. Niece, nephew or their spouse
  10. First cousin or their spouse

However, there may be gift tax implications for changing the beneficiary on a 529 account. For example, there may be gift tax consequences when changing the beneficiary to a new member of the prior beneficiary’s family if that new beneficiary is of a lower generation than the prior beneficiary. Consult a tax professional to assess gift tax implications from changing a beneficiary.

How to change a 529 plan beneficiary

Beneficiary change forms can be found on a 529 plan’s website. Depending on the 529 plan, the beneficiary change form may be completed online or printed and submitted by mail. To complete a beneficiary change request, the 529 plan account owner will need to provide:

  • 529 plan account number
  • 529 plan account owner’s name and telephone number
  • Current beneficiary’s name and Social Security Number (SSN) or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN)
  • New beneficiary’s name and Social Security Number (SSN) or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN)
  • The amount of the funds to be transferred to the new beneficiary
  • Investment allocation instructions
  • Signature of the 529 plan account owner or trustee authorizing the beneficiary change

If the beneficiary has undergone a name change, the account owner should provide the 529 plan with a copy of the court order changing the beneficiary’s name. Alternately, the 529 plan account owner can use the beneficiary change form to change the beneficiary’s name.

Changing the 529 plan investment selection

529 plan account owners may choose to select new investment allocations when changing the 529 plan beneficiary. For example, parents who use an age-based investment allocation to save for a child and later change the beneficiary to a younger child should consider adjusting the investment allocation based on the new beneficiary’s age.

If the new 529 plan beneficiary will be using the funds to pay for K-12 education, parents should consider investing the funds in a target portfolio. Target portfolios do not adjust allocations based on the beneficiary’s age, but rather consist on a mix of stocks and bonds based on a desired level of risk (conservative, moderate, aggressive). 

Investment allocation instructions are included on the beneficiary change form. The 529 plan account owner may select a percentage of funds to allocate to each investment portfolio the 529 plan offers.

Normally, 529 plan account owners can make only two investment changes per calendar year, but there is an exception when the investment change is requested with a beneficiary change.

A good place to start:

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