For many families, the idealized path of starting an education fund at birth and compounding steadily over 18 years — is an impossible myth. Competing financial priorities, limited cash flow, or simple lack of awareness often delay the first contribution. By the time college is on the horizon, the account balance frequently falls short of the daunting sticker price of modern higher education. However, a late start is far from a lost cause. Advisors play a pivotal role in reframing the narrative, identifying tactical opportunities, and guiding clients toward solutions. The most ideal solutions are late-start 529 plans that balance tuition needs with long-term financial health.
Reframing the Challenge
The first hurdle is behavioral. Clients who feel “behind” often disengage, assuming the gap is too large to bridge. Advisors must emphasize that partial funding is a massive win. Every dollar in a 529 plan benefits from tax-advantaged growth and tax-free withdrawals for qualified expenses.
Rather than aiming for 100% coverage, you can reposition the goal: reduce high-interest loan reliance and preserve the student’s future financial flexibility. The psychological shift from “I failed to save enough” to “I am reducing my child’s future debt load” can re-energize a client’s commitment to the plan.
Accelerated Contribution Strategies
When the time horizon is compressed, the “slow and steady” approach won’t cut it. Advisors should approach late-start 529 plans with high-impact levers such as:
- Superfunding via Five-Year Gifting: Clients with sudden liquidity — bonuses, inheritances, or asset sales — can front-load contributions. The tax code allows individuals to contribute up to five times the annual gift exclusion ($90,000 in 2024, or $180,000 for married couples) in a single year. This jump-starting mechanism is one of the most effective ways to maximize the remaining years of tax-free compounding.
- Cash Flow Reallocation: This is the time for surgical budgeting. Redirecting discretionary spending or temporarily pausing taxable investment contributions can free up meaningful cash in the final pre-college years.
- Grandparent Coordination: Grandparents are often the untapped secret weapon in 529 planning. Recent changes to the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) rules mean that distributions from grandparent-owned 529s no longer count as untaxed student income, making their late-stage contributions more powerful than ever.
Investment Adjustments for Shorter Windows
Late starters face a difficult challenge. They need their investments to grow quickly to catch up, but they also have less time to recover if the market declines.
Traditional portfolios that automatically become more conservative with age may not work well for someone who is behind on savings. In these cases, it can make sense to adjust the strategy by keeping a slightly higher portion of investments in stocks to support growth. However, this approach comes with greater risk, so it’s important that the investor fully understands the potential for losses.
For individuals who are within about three years of starting withdrawals, careful planning becomes critical. Withdrawals should be timed in a way that avoids selling stocks during a market downturn. Instead, using cash or short-term fixed income investments as a buffer can help protect the portfolio from unnecessary losses.
Integrating the 529 into a Broader Strategy
A 529 plan should never exist in a vacuum. Advisors must keep in mind that retirement security comes first. Late-stage 529 contributions should never cannibalize a client’s 401(k) or IRA health.
Furthermore, the SECURE 2.0 Act has added a safety net for those worried about overfunding or wasting money in a 529. The ability to roll over up to $35,000 (lifetime limit) of leftover 529 funds into a Roth IRA for the beneficiary helps mitigate the fear of starting “too late” or saving “too much.”
Managing Expectations & Outcomes
For late starters, transparency is the best policy. Advisors should utilize multi-scenario modeling — spanning optimistic projections, realistic base cases, and “safety net” strategies that integrate 529 funds with loans and cash flow — to ground late-start expectations in reality.
Advisors who approach 529 plans with empathy and technical precision can transform a client’s anxiety into a manageable, actionable strategy.
Originally published on Advisor Perspectives
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