A Grandparent’s Guide to Gifting

A Grandparent’s Guide to Gifting

A Grandparent’s Guide to Gifting

By Neil Rose, CFA

You’ve built something meaningful. Here’s how to share it thoughtfully, wisely, and tax efficiently.

There are few things more satisfying than helping the people you love most get a head start in life. Good news: the tax code is quite generous to grandparents who want to give.


The Annual Gift Exclusion

Every year, you can give any person up to $19,000 completely free of gift tax—no paperwork, no forms, no impact on your lifetime exemption. As a couple, you can give $38,000 to a single recipient. A grandparent with four grandchildren can transfer $76,000 per year out of their estate this way, completely tax-free. The exclusion doesn’t carry over; use it or lose it, every December 31st.


The Unlimited Education and Medical Exclusion

Payments made directly to an educational institution for tuition, or directly to a medical provider for care, are completely exempt from gift tax—no limit, not counted against the annual exclusion or the lifetime exemption. You cannot give your grandchild a check to pay their tuition; you must write the check to the school.


529 Plans: The Gold Standard for Education Gifting

  • Contributions grow tax-free

  • Withdrawals for qualified education expenses are tax-free

  • Unused funds can now be rolled into a Roth IRA for the beneficiary (up to $35,000 lifetime, after the account has been held 15 years—a bonus from the SECURE Act 2.0)

  • Superfunding: Front-load five years of annual exclusions into a 529 all at once—$95,000 per beneficiary from a single grandparent, $190,000 from a couple


Quick Reference: Gifting Options at a Glance

Method Annual Limit Tax-Free Growth? Restrictions
Annual Gift$19,000/personNoNone; gift-splitting requires Form 709
Direct Tuition/MedicalUnlimitedn.a.Must pay institution or provider directly
529 Plan$19K/yr (or $95K superfunded)Yes (federal)Qualified education expenses; Roth rollover requires 15-year hold; up to $35K
UTMA/UGMA$19,000/yrNoChild controls eventually
Gifting Tip:
Don’t just write a check! The best outcomes come when grandparents bring their children and grandchildren into conversation about what the money is for, what values it represents, and what the family hopes it will enable.

This material is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Please consult your tax professional for guidance specific to your situation.

About the Author

Neil Rose, CFA, is the founder and CEO of Regency Capital Management.


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