Wolf Office Tools

πŸŽ“ 529 College Savings Calculator

Calculate how much your 529 college savings plan will grow. Find out if you are on track to cover college costs and how much to contribute monthly.

What is a 529 College Savings Calculator?

This 529 plan calculator helps US individuals and families make data-driven financial decisions about education savings. Enter your specific financial details to get personalised projections, payment estimates, and scenario comparisons tailored to current US tax laws and financial regulations.

All calculations are based on current US federal guidelines. 529 earnings grow tax-free and withdrawals are tax-free for qualified education expenses.Individual results depend on personal financial circumstances, credit profile, and local regulations that may differ from federal standards.

How to Use This Calculator

  • Enter accurate inputs: Use your actual figures from pay stubs, account statements, or lender quotes for most accurate results.
  • Model multiple scenarios: Change interest rates, time horizons, and contribution amounts to understand sensitivities.
  • Compare options: Run the calculator for different strategies to identify the optimal approach for your situation.
  • Use as a starting point: Calculator results provide a solid baseline for conversations with financial advisors, lenders, or tax professionals.

Key Considerations

  • Tax implications: Most financial decisions have tax consequences. Consult IRS publications or a CPA for your specific tax situation.
  • Rate changes: Interest rates, contribution limits, and tax brackets change annually. Verify current rates before making decisions.
  • State variations: Federal rules shown here may be modified by state law. Your state may have additional taxes, credits, or programmes.
  • Credit score impact: Many US financial products are significantly affected by your FICO credit score. Check your score before applying for loans.
Where can I find official US information about education savings?

Official US government sources: IRS (irs.gov) for tax matters, CFPB (consumerfinance.gov) for consumer financial protection, SEC (investor.gov) for investment information, SSA (ssa.gov) for Social Security, and HUD (hud.gov) for housing. IRS Publication 970 (irs.gov), savingforcollege.com

How do I account for inflation in these calculations?

US long-term inflation averages approximately 2.5–3.5% annually (Federal Reserve targets 2%). For any projection over 5+ years, the real (inflation-adjusted) return matters more than the nominal return. Subtract expected inflation from your nominal return assumption to get the real return for purchasing power calculations.

Should I use these calculators for tax filing?

These calculators are for planning and education only β€” not for tax filing. For actual tax preparation, use IRS official forms, certified tax software (TurboTax, H&R Block), or a licensed CPA or Enrolled Agent. Calculations here do not account for all edge cases, AMT, state taxes, or recent law changes.

How does a financial advisor differ from a financial planner?

Financial advisor is a general term for anyone giving financial guidance. CFP (Certified Financial Planner) is a fiduciary bound to act in your best interest. Broker-dealers are held to a lower suitability standard. For complex financial planning, a fee-only CFP (no commission from product sales) generally provides the most objective advice. Use NAPFA (napfa.org) to find fee-only advisors.

⚠️ Disclaimer: This 529 plan calculator is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Consult qualified US professionals for personalised guidance. Sources: IRS Publication 970 (irs.gov), savingforcollege.com

Last Updated: March 2026 Β· For US audiences

FAQ

What is a 529 plan?

A 529 plan is a tax-advantaged savings account for education expenses. Contributions grow tax-free and withdrawals for qualified education expenses are federally tax-free. Most states also offer state tax deductions. Unused funds can be transferred to other family members or rolled over to a Roth IRA (up to $35,000 lifetime, per SECURE 2.0).

How much should I save for college?

A common target: $400-600/month starting at birth for a public university; $700-1000/month for a private university. But any amount helps. College costs increase about 5-6% per year historically.

What if my child does not use the 529 funds?

You can: change the beneficiary to another family member (including yourself), use funds for K-12 tuition (up to $10,000/year), use for trade school or apprenticeship programs, roll over up to $35,000 to a Roth IRA (per SECURE 2.0, starting 2024), or withdraw with 10% penalty plus income tax on earnings.

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