A small but flexible education account: modest annual limits, broad investment choice, and tax-free withdrawals for qualified education costs.
Key takeaways
- Used for qualified education expenses.
- Contributions are capped per beneficiary per year and limited by contributor income.
- Funds generally must be used by the time the beneficiary reaches a set age.
What it is
A tax-advantaged education savings account. The account is a structure; the investments it holds are separate and carry their own risks.
Who it’s for
- Families saving for education who want investment control
- Contributors under the income limits
- Savers pairing it with a 529
- Parents starting early for a young beneficiary
How it works
- Open a Coverdell ESA for a beneficiary.
- Contribute after-tax dollars up to the annual limit.
- Withdraw tax-free for qualified education expenses.
Eligibility
Subject to contributor income limits and beneficiary age rules.
Contributions and funding
Up to $2,000 per beneficiary per year (a statutory limit, unchanged for 2026), combined across all contributors and subject to contributor income phase-outs. 2026 tax year
What it can hold
Publicly traded securities and other permitted investments.
Taxes and reporting
Growth is tax-free and qualified education withdrawals are tax-free; nonqualified earnings are taxable and may carry an additional tax. Requires tax review
Withdrawals and distributions
Tax-free for qualified education expenses; unused balances have age-based rules.
How Investor Services custodies it
Investor Services can custody the ESA and its investments, processing the contributions you direct. Qualification of expenses is your responsibility.
Risks and limitations
- Low annual contribution ceiling
- Income limits on contributors
- Nonqualified withdrawals are taxed
Common mistakes to avoid
- Contributing above the $2,000 combined annual cap
- Missing the contributor income phase-out
- Overlooking the beneficiary age rules
- Taking nonqualified withdrawals that are taxed
Frequently asked questions
Coverdell or 529?
529 plans have higher limits and no contributor income cap; Coverdell offers broader investment choice. Compare both.
What counts as qualified?
A range of education expenses; confirm current rules.
Is there an age limit?
Yes, for contributions and use of the funds.
Educational only. This page is general information, not individualized investment, legal, or tax advice. Rules depend on your account type, transaction, tax year, and circumstances — consult a qualified professional.