How
to Start a Coverdell Account
It's easy to set up a Coverdell education savings account.
Almost any bank, mutual fund company or stockbroker will be happy to help
you establish a Coverdell account. (We'll refer to the financial institution
you choose as the account provider.) Be sure to ask about their
minimum balance and what fees, if any, will apply to the account. You'll
need to supply the following information:
- Your own name and social security number.
- The designated beneficiary's name, address, date of birth and social
security number.
- The name, address and social security number of the responsible
individual. This is the person who will control the account, at
least initially. If you're a parent or guardian of the designated
beneficiary, you can name yourself as responsible individual. Otherwise
you have to name a parent or guardian.
You'll also need to tell the account provider the amount of your initial
contribution. In some cases you may have to select an investment at the time
you set up the account. In others (such as an account with a stockbroker)
you may simply deposit the money into the new Coverdell account and the
responsible person can invest it later.
Choices on the Account
Agreement Form
If your account provider uses the standard form published by the IRS for the
account agreement, you will have two choices when you set up the account.
The first has to do with what happens when the designated beneficiary
reaches the age of majority (usually 18) under the relevant state law.
Unless you indicate otherwise in the agreement, control of the account
will pass to the designated beneficiary at that point.
| If you want to retain control of the Coverdell
account after the beneficiary turns 18, you must check a box on the
IRS form at the time you establish the account. |
The other choice has to do with changing the designated
beneficiary. When you set up the account, you declare whether or not you
want the responsible individual (the person in control of the account) to be
able to change the designated beneficiary. If you're going to be the
responsible individual, you probably want to reserve this flexibility in
case of a change in circumstances. You might want to prevent a change in
beneficiary in some situations, though.
You're allowed to include additional provisions
concerning the account when you set it up, so long as they are consistent
with the rules for Coverdell accounts and with state law. You might, for
example, name a person who will receive the account in the event the
designated beneficiary dies. Doing so may permit the account to continue as
a Coverdell account instead of terminating at the death of the designated
beneficiary.
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