Changing the Beneficiary of a
Coverdell
Account
You can change the beneficiary of a Coverdell education savings
account to a different family member.
What if your child doesn't go to college? You socked away money in a
Coverdell account and all your child wants to do is play in a rock band.
Meanwhile, a younger sibling is hitting the books and you'd like to use the
money for that child's education.
If you saved in a custodial account under the Uniform
Transfers to Minors Act you'd be out of luck. That kind of account belongs
to the child for whom it is set up, and you can't transfer it to another
child. You have more flexibility when you save in a Coverdell account. The
responsible individual is allowed to name a new beneficiary if all the
following are true:
- The trust agreement permits a change in beneficiaries.
- The existing beneficiary is under 30 years of age.
- The new beneficiary is under 30 years of age.
- The new beneficiary is a member of the existing beneficiary's family.
| If your financial firm uses the standard IRS form to
set up the account, you have to check a box on that form to be
permitted to change beneficiaries later. |
Family Defined
For this purpose, the beneficiary's family is broadly defined. All of the
following are included:
- The beneficiary's child, grandchild or stepchild.
- A brother, sister, stepbrother or stepsister of the beneficiary.
- A son or daughter of the beneficiary's brother or sister (in other
words, a niece or nephew of the beneficiary).
- The father, mother, grandfather, grandmother, stepfather or stepmother
of the beneficiary. (Remember, though, the new beneficiary generally has to be
under 30 years of age — a very young grandparent!)
- A brother or sister of the beneficiary's father or mother (in other
words, an aunt or uncle of the beneficiary).
- The beneficiary's spouse, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, father-in-law,
mother-in-law, brother-in-law or sister-in-law.
- Beginning in 2002, the beneficiary's first cousin.
You can rename the beneficiary as part of a rollover, or simply
redesignate the beneficiary by contacting the financial institution where
the Coverdell account is now maintained and filling out whatever paperwork
they require.
Former Spouse
Because a spouse is one of the relatives listed above, a Coverdell account
can be transferred to the existing beneficiary's spouse at any time. The
Coverdell account can also be transferred to a former spouse as part of a
divorce or separation. In this situation, the transfer doesn't have to occur
while the individuals are still married. The account can continue to be
treated as a Coverdell account with the former spouse as the designated
beneficiary.
Death of Beneficiary
If the designated beneficiary dies and no one has been designated as the
death beneficiary of the account, the entire balance must be distributed
within 30 days after the death of the beneficiary. Even if the account is
not actually distributed within that period of time, it will be treated as
distributed on the last day of that period.
The account can continue as a Coverdell account, though,
if a member of the beneficiary's family (as defined earlier) has been
designated to receive the account at the death of the beneficiary. In this
situation, the requirement to distribute the account within 30 days after
the death of the designated beneficiary does not apply.
| It's a good idea to designate a death beneficiary
when you set up the account. You can also do this later, provided
that you do it before the beneficiary dies. |
Coverdell top page |
Next: Special Needs Beneficiaries |