You put money in, it grows tax-free, and you pull it out without paying taxes. That's the simple promise of a 529 plan. But the rules for that last part—the withdrawals—trip people up all the time.
If you don't follow the rules, you lose the benefits. Here is exactly how it works, in plain terms.
| Benefit Type | Federal Level | State Level |
|---|---|---|
| Contributions | Not deductible | Deductible or credit in over 30 states |
| Growth | Tax-deferred | Tax-deferred |
| Withdrawals for Qualified Expenses | Tax-free | Tax-free |
| Withdrawals for Non-Qualified Expenses | Earnings taxed + 10% penalty | May recapture state deductions |
It looks simple. You get the big tax break on the back end.
Sarah puts $10,000 in a 529 for her baby. It grows to $30,000 by college. She uses it for tuition. She pays zero tax on the $20,000 profit.
If she used it on a car, she'd owe income tax plus a $2,000 penalty on the growth.
Your money grows without any tax drag year after year.
The government only asks that you use it for approved school costs.
What Counts as a Qualified Expense
This is where the fine print matters. The IRS has a specific list. You must match the withdrawal to the expense in the same calendar year.
| Qualified (Tax-Free) | Non-Qualified (Penalty Applies) |
|---|---|
| Tuition and fees | Transportation costs |
| Books and supplies | Health insurance |
| Room and board (enrolled at least half-time) | College application fees |
| Computers and software (required for study) | Gym memberships |
| Up to $10,000/year for K-12 tuition | Repayment of student loans (old rule) |
| Up to $10,000 lifetime for student loan repayment | Sports club fees |
| Apprenticeship program fees | - |
The room and board rule is tricky. You can only use the 529 for housing if the student is at least half-time. And the cost must be the school's official cost of attendance for housing, or the actual amount if off-campus—whichever is lower.
Mark's daughter lives off campus. Rent is $8,000 a year. The school's official housing cost is $6,000. He can only withdraw $6,000 tax-free for rent.
The extra $2,000 would be a non-qualified withdrawal if he pulled it from the 529.
If the cost isn't needed for enrollment or attendance, it's likely not qualified.
Always check the student's enrollment status before paying for housing.
The Penalty Trap: How Non-Qualified Withdrawals Work
If you take money out for the wrong reason, you do not lose the whole account. You only pay a penalty on the earnings portion.
Your original contributions—the principal—come out without any tax or penalty, because you put that money in after-tax.
| Component | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Contribution (Principal) | Withdrawn tax-free and penalty-free |
| Earnings (Growth) | Subject to income tax + 10% penalty |
| State Recapture | Some states demand back prior tax deductions |
The penalty has exceptions. You can avoid the 10% hit if the student gets a scholarship, attends a U.S. military academy, dies, or becomes disabled. You still pay the income tax on earnings, but the extra 10% goes away.
Tom withdraws $5,000 of earnings for a trip. He pays his income tax rate on the $5,000, plus a $500 penalty.
Lisa's daughter gets a full scholarship. She withdraws the same $5,000. She pays income tax, but owes zero penalty.
Keep records of any scholarships awarded. They are your ticket to penalty-free access.
You never lose your original contributions, no matter what.
Changing the Beneficiary and Rollover Rules
What if your child doesn't go to college? You have options. You can change the beneficiary to another family member without tax consequences.
Family members include siblings, parents, cousins, and even yourself. The list is broad.
| Option | Tax Impact | Key Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Change beneficiary to sibling | None | Must be a "family member" |
| Roll over to a Roth IRA for beneficiary (starting 2024) | None, up to $35,000 limit | Account open for 15 years |
| Cash out (non-qualified) | Tax + penalty on earnings | Principal is safe |
| Keep it for future grandchild | None | No time limit |
Starting in 2024, a new rule lets you roll leftover 529 money into a Roth Individual Retirement Account (IRA) for the beneficiary. This is a big change. The account must have been open for at least 15 years, and there is a $35,000 lifetime cap.
Carlos has $25,000 left in a 529 after his son graduates. The account is 16 years old. He can roll that money into his son's Roth IRA over a few years.
It turns education savings into retirement savings with zero penalty.
The Roth IRA rollover is a powerful escape hatch for unused funds.
Changing the beneficiary is instant and carries no tax bill.
Coordination with Other Education Credits
You cannot double-dip. You can claim the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) and still use 529 money. But you must allocate expenses carefully.
You cannot use the same tuition dollars to claim a credit and as a basis for a tax-free 529 withdrawal.
| Scenario | Strategy |
|---|---|
| Tuition is $20,000, you use $5,000 for AOTC | Use 529 for the remaining $15,000 |
| Full tuition paid by 529 | Cannot claim AOTC on that money |
| You pay $4,000 out of pocket for tuition | Claim full AOTC, use 529 for room and board |
This is really a math problem. Paying some tuition out of pocket to capture the AOTC often makes sense. The credit can be worth up to $2,500 per year.
Jane pays $4,000 of tuition with cash from her work bonus. She gets the full $2,500 American Opportunity Tax Credit. Then she covers the rest with the 529.
This gets her the government credit and the tax-free 529 benefit without conflict.
Key Takeaways
| Key Point | What It Means | Action Item |
|---|---|---|
| Tax-free is rule, not exception | Almost all school costs are covered | Match withdrawals to bills in the same year |
| Principal is never at risk | Your deposits come back tax-free | Don't fear tapping the account if needed |
| Penalty has escape hatches | Scholarships, death, or disability waive penalty | Document all scholarships religiously |
| New Roth rollover rule | Up to $35,000 can become retirement money | Check if your account meets the 15-year test |
| AOTC needs coordination | You can combine the tax credit with 529 money | Pay $4,000 out of pocket for maximum benefit |