Compound Interest Helps Your 529 Plan Take Off

Many factors help a 529 account grow. One is time. Another is automatic recurring contributions. And another is compound interest.

The good news about compound interest

What’s so special about compound interest? Well, simple interest is interest earned on the first contribution only. Compounded interest is interest earned not only on the initial contribution but also on every additional contribution, earnings from your 529 investment options, and the already accumulated interest. Compound interest can help your account with Ohio’s 529 Plan, CollegeAdvantage, grow even faster.

If you’d like to see the power of compound interest, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission offers a calculator to input your information to see how compound interest can build up your college savings account. You can use this calculator with the Ohio 529 College Savings Estimator calculator, to start seeing how compound interest can help grow your Ohio 529 savings account.

Compound interest is especially powerful over an extended period as the amount of earned interest grows larger and larger. This is an excellent reason to start as 529 fund as early as possible for your child – to maximize the effects of compound interest in the account. Whether you started saving for your child before they were born or if you are getting a later start, Ohio’s 529 Plan offers account strategy suggestions based on your child’s age. Celebratory milestones, like birthdays and graduations, are the perfect opportunity to start or ramp up your saving. You can also take advantage of Ugift, a unique code which you can share with loved ones so they can make contributions to your Ohio 529 account, and Upromise, a free loyalty program with which you can do your everyday shopping, eating out and traveling, and earn cash back to add to your 529 college savings account. You can review the appropriate guidance and choose for yourself the best path for your 529 account based on your child’s age — baby to toddler, kindergarten to elementary schoolmiddle schoolhigh school, and college.

Student loans: Where compound interest is bad news

In a 529 plan, compound interest works for your best interests. On the flip side, accrued interest on a student loan debt can set back your and your children’s financial wellness as the compound interest will grow on the borrowed funds as well as unpaid accumulated interest. So, it’s never too late or too early to start saving for your child’s future higher education costs. Every dollar you save today in a 529 account is money your child won’t have to borrow for their education and career training after high school. An investment in a 529 plan is an investment in your child.

Additional tax benefits for saving in a 529 plan

Your Ohio 529 account also grows your education savings through the three tax benefits.

First, all earnings in a 529 plan are tax-free. So, all the extra funds generated from compound interest, all the contributions, all the investment earnings that build up in your college savings account will not be taxed. This means all investment growth is available for you to use to your children’s future education and career training costs.

Second, your 529 for those qualified costs are also tax-free. And what are those qualified higher education expenses? They include tuition; room and board (on and off campus) when the beneficiary is enrolled at least half-time; mandatory fees; computer equipment and related technology as well as internet services; books, supplies and equipment related to enrollment and classes; and certain expenses for a special-needs student. These expenditures also include qualified apprenticeships costs such as fees, textbooks, supplies, and equipment like required trade tools. The apprenticeship program must be registered with the Secretary of Labor’s National Apprenticeships Act to use a 529 plan withdrawal. You can also make a tax-free 529 withdrawal to pay up to $10,000 a year for K-12 tuition at a public, private, or religious school.

Third, Ohio residents who contribute to Ohio’s 529 Plan, CollegeAdvantage, can deduct their contributions from their taxable state income. The deduction amount is $4,000 per year, per beneficiary, with unlimited carry forward. However, $4,000 is not a contribution cap. If an Ohio taxpayer contributes more than $4,000 in one year, they can continue to subtract $4,000 per year, per beneficiary, from their State of Ohio taxable income until all the 529 contributions are deducted.

Since 1989, Ohio’s 529 Plan has been helping families across the nation save for their children’s education. Ohio’s 529 Plan covers qualified costs at any four-year college or university, two-year community college, trade or vocational school, apprenticeship approved by the U.S. Labor Department, or certificate program nationwide that accepts federal financial aid. Learn, plan, and start for as little as $25 today at CollegeAdvantage

Back To Top

Notice

Closing the playlist now will erase progress completed.

Lightbulb icon

529 Short Course: New Parents

5 things every new parent needs to know about saving for education

  1. Why Ohio 529?
    529s are specifically created for higher education savings. Unlike a traditional banking account, a 529 account benefits from tax-free earnings and tax-free withdrawals. For Ohio residents, there is also a state income tax deduction for those contributions.
  2. It’s simple to start.
    You can open your 529 account online in minutes with as little as $25. With ready-made portfolio options, you don’t have to be a financial expert to feel confident in your savings plan choices.
  3. Set it and forget it with automatic deposits.
    The sooner you start saving, the longer your account benefits from the Ohio 529 tax advantages as well as compound interest. Many new parents take their 529 contributions off their to-do list by setting up small automatic deposits from either their banking accounts or paycheck. Also, with our ReadySave 529 app, it’s also easy to track and adjust your account right on your mobile device.
  4. Save for college, career training, and more.
    Ohio 529 can be used at over 30,000 schools of all kinds, nationwide, including universities; community colleges; trade, technical, and vocational schools; certificate programs; and apprenticeships. Your Ohio 529 account can also pay for K-12 tuition at a public, private, or religious school. And, if it’s not needed for educational expenses, you can now roll over your 529 to a Roth IRA.
  5. Others can help.
    It’s easy for family and friends to contribute to your child’s account and receive tax benefits for themselves. You can share your account’s unique Ugift number with others to contribute online without creating their own 529 accounts. Those who live in Ohio will also receive a state income tax deduction for their contributions. Also, you can sign up to have reminder emails sent to you and loved ones for the big milestones in your child’s life.

Hoping to find gold at the end of the rainbow? If you are saving with Ohio 529 CollegeAdvantage, you have the benefit of Ugift with your account, which is savings gold.

Ugift makes it easy for others to give to your Ohio 529 account. With Ugift, you generate a unique code which allows loved ones to contribute to your Ohio 529 savings plan without needing the actual account number. Once they have the Ugift code, your friends and family can visit Ugift529.com to make their online gifts directly to your 529.

When friends and family ask for gift ideas, share that you are saving for your child’s future education with Ohio 529. Then invite them to join in with gift contributions to your Ohio 529 account with Ugift. After all, a gift for your child’s education will truly last a lifetime.

The quickest and easiest way to pass along your child’s Ugift code is with the ReadySave 529 app, which you can access as an Ohio 529 CollegeAdvantage account owner. At the bottom of every page is an Ugift icon. Click on the gift symbol to view your Ugift code which you can send immediately as an invitation via texts, emails, and Facebook/Instagram chats from your phone.

Or log into your account online to view your child’s Ugift code to send to family and friends who would like to give the gift of education.

The Ugift code doesn’t expire. Which means whenever there is an occasion to celebrate­ like baby showers, holidays, birthdays, graduations, and special achievements, your family and friends can give to your Ohio 529 account. And they can choose to contribute as much as they want whenever they want. It can be a one-time gift or recurring gift; all they need is that Ugift code. Your loved ones’ contributions - whether big or small – will add up over the years. Added to the power of compound interest, these gifts will power your 529 savings to cover even more college and career training costs.

An added bonus for gift givers who live in Ohio: They are also eligible to receive a state income tax deduction for their Ohio 529 gift contributions, up to $4,000 per year, per beneficiary.

To learn more about all of the gifting options with Ohio 529 and order cards for special occasions, visit  529 Gift Central.

  • 1 Thumbnail image for WATCH: Understand the cost of delaying
  • 2 Thumbnail image for WATCH: Compare the two most common ways to save
  • 3 Thumbnail image for READ: The 5 things every new parent needs to know about saving for education
  • 4 Thumbnail image for WATCH: Wondering about flexibility?
  • 5 Thumbnail image for WATCH: Here's help figuring out how much to save.
  • 6 Thumbnail image for READ: Why a Ugift code is savings gold
  • 7 Thumbnail image for WATCH:  Concerned about annoying fees?
  • 8 Thumbnail image for WATCH: The simplest, most popular way to invest
  • 9 Thumbnail image for WATCH: Complete portfolios with predefined risk levels