Business-Tax-Deductions1

Taxes | March 22, 2023

New Tax Law Boosts ABLE Accounts

If you meet the tax law requirements and are receiving Supplementary Security Income (SSI) and/or Medicaid benefits, you’re automatically eligible to participate.

Ken Berry, JD

Thanks to a little-noticed law passed in 2014—the Achieving a Better Life Experience Act (ABLE) Act—a family can set up a tax-favored savings account for a disabled individual. Appropriately enough, these are referred to as “ABLE accounts.” Now the new SECURE Act 2.0 enacted at the end of 2022 extends this opportunity to more families.

Background: An ABLE account works pretty much like a Section 529 plan account for higher education expenses. After you establish the account and contribute to it, any earnings inside the account are exempt from current tax. (Contributions are not tax-deductible). Finally, when you withdraw amounts from the ABLE account, the payouts are tax-free if they are used to pay for qualified expenses.

Previously, eligibility for an ABLE account was limited to individuals who are blind or have another significant disability with its onset beginning before age 26.

This limitation often shut out deserving people who could benefit from ABLE accounts.

New law change: SECURE Act 2.0 boosts the age threshold from age 26 by two decades to age 46. The change takes effect in 2026. This provision is expected to be especially beneficial to individuals with mental health issues, other disabling illnesses and veterans who become disabled after their mid-twenties.

If you meet the tax law requirements and are receiving Supplementary Security Income (SSI) and/or Medicaid benefits, you’re automatically eligible to participate. One other key rule is that the money in the ABLE account won’t count towards the $2,000 limit on personal assets for these public benefits.

When total assets in the account exceed $100,000, the beneficiary’s SSI will be suspended until the balance drops below $100,000. However, Medicaid eligibility will not be affected by the account’s amount.

The disabled individual, friends and family members may make contributions to the account. But the annual limit for contributions is currently $17,000, the same as the annual gift tax exclusion. (The limit is indexed for inflation in $1,000 increments.) The total limit on contributions that can be made to an ABLE account over time is subject to the applicable state limit for Section 529 accounts, with certain modifications. In many states, this overall limit exceeds $300,000.

For purposes of tax-free distributions, “qualified expenses” include those related to the beneficiary as a disabled individual. This includes the following:

  • Education;
  • Housing;
  • Transportation;
  • Employment training and support;
  • Assistive technology;
  • Personal support services;
  • Health care expenses; and
  • Financial management and administrative services.

Only one ABLE account can be set up for a disabled individual. As with Section 529 plans, various investment options are available to participants.

Each participating state is responsible for establishing and operating its own ABLE program. A state may choose to contract with another state to offer its residents with a significant disability access to an ABLE account.

Another approach: Alternatively, a family may benefit from creating a special needs trust, which has similar characteristics to an ABLE account. Contact your professional advisors for details.

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Ken Berry, JD

Ken Berry, JD

CPA Practice Advisor Tax Correspondent

Ken Berry, Esq., is a nationally-known writer and editor specializing in tax and financial planning matters. During a career of more than 35 years, he has served as managing editor of a publisher of content-based marketing tools and vice president of an online continuing education company in the financial services industry. As a freelance writer, Ken has authored thousands of articles for a wide variety of newsletters, magazines and other periodicals, emphasizing a sense of wit and clarity.

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