Clients who sock away funds in college savings plans seem to have a smart take on how to meet their offspring’s education costs. So why do so many parents leave money on the table?
The majority of people who buy 529 accounts do so through an advisor, rather than through a state program that sells them directly, the by-far cheaper option. Many advisors charge additional fees that eat away at the plans’ returns, leaving less to bankroll the $
But even fee-only advisors who forgo a commission and instead
People who use an advisor to buy a 529 “see the value there and are willing to pay for the help,” argues John Boroff, the director of retirement and college leadership at Fidelity. “Those using an advisor are just comfortable in that space.”
But even for independent advisors who put a client’s interests above their own, there can be a financial cost for clients — and fiduciary cost for advisors — when accounts hold more than will be needed come college time. “You can be oversaving in your 529 and hurting yourself in retirement,” says CFP Kenneth Couser, the director of financial planning at Janney Montgomery Scott’s wealth management division, in Philadelphia. “Your savings in one can be to the detriment of the other.”
The plans are funded with dollars on which taxes have already been paid, with withdrawals tax-free when put toward tuition, housing, lab fees, books, computers and other college-related expenses. The tax perk, similar to that of Roth plans, has made 529s a growing financial niche that held more than $425 billion in assets in nearly 15 million accounts at the end of last year,
The accounts are big with affluent families, even those who may be able to afford the
So what are the benefits for advisors who sell 529s, and what are the drawbacks?
Going for fees vs. selling convenience
A 529 bought through an advisor or broker who charges commissions carries an average annual fee of 0.89%, according to
Advisor fees stem from the more-costly actively managed funds that advisor-sold plans typically invest in, and include “distribution” costs for marketing and selling (those hated 12b-1 fees). Depending on the class of share bought, there’s also an upfront commission of as much as 5.75%, according to Paul Curley, the director of college savings research at SS Market Intelligence.
Clients who buy a 529 through their brokerages can pay even more. A 529 through Morgan Stanley can cost “up to approximately” 2.56% a year and carry an initial sales charge of up to 5.75%, the Wall Street bank
Morningstar
The plans have different share “classes” that are geared to how long an investor has before getting hit with tuition bills. In general, “Class A” shares charge an upfront commission and lower annual fees, while “Class C” shares have no front-end load but higher annual fees. Savingforcollege.com says Class C shares are a
Loreen Gilbert, the founder and CEO of WealthWise Financial Services, an RIA in Irvine, California, says that “it’s not just cost — we can help you navigate” the intricate rules, including how to make dollar-for-dollar withdrawals without a penalty when a child gets a scholarship, or how to structure plans so that they
The risks to advisors and clients
Michael Harris, the chair of retirement studies at the College for Financial Planning, an educational company owned by Kaplan, says that brokers who put parents in Class C shares when a child is young risk running afoul of Regulation Best Interest, or Reg BI, an investor-protection standard for brokers that is lower than the fiduciary standard to which independent advisors are held. For younger kids, “it’s [economically] better to pay an up-front commission and smaller service charge, rather than no commission and a larger service charge.”
Since 2019, self-regulator FINRA has been
But even advisors who don’t get commissions and operate on the higher fiduciary standard can face a conundrum. A 2020 Journal of Accountancy
Meanwhile, CFP Clint Haynes, the founder and president of NextGen Wealth, an RIA in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, says that “wealthy clients just assume they have to go through an advisor. Of course, the advisor may not mention that to them."