Every 529 plan has an account owner and a beneficiary. Most families spend a lot of time thinking about the beneficiary and almost none thinking about what happens if the owner dies.
The short answer: if the account owner named a successor owner, the account transfers to that person outside of probate, usually with nothing more than a death certificate and a form. If they didn’t, what happens next depends on the plan’s rules and state law — and the account could end up in probate.
Here’s how it works, what it means for taxes, and what happens if the beneficiary dies instead.
Account Owner vs. Beneficiary
529 plans have two distinct roles: an account owner and a beneficiary. Typically, a parent or grandparent is the account owner and a child is the beneficiary, though an account owner can also name themselves as beneficiary.
The beneficiary may be a spouse, child, grandchild, sibling, or another relative.
The account owner controls the account: they choose the investments, take distributions, and can change the beneficiary. The beneficiary has no control, even after turning 18. For a deeper dive on who can own an account and what that control means, see our full guide to 529 plan ownership rules.
What Happens When The Account Owner Dies
The rules for death of the account owner are specified by the 529 plan and state law. Many 529 plans allow the account owner to specify one or more successor owners when setting up the account. A secondary successor owner is sometimes called a contingent owner. The successor owners can also be specified later.
It’s a good idea to set up multiple successor owners. Many account owners specify their spouse as the successor owner. But what happens if the account owner and their spouse pass away at the same time?
Specifying the successor owner and contingent owner lets the account owner choose who becomes responsible for the account upon their death.
No Successor Owner Is Specified
Without a designated successor, the outcome varies by plan and state:
- The surviving spouse may automatically become the account owner
- The beneficiary may become the account owner (more on this below)
- The executor of the estate may name a new account owner or request a distribution
- The account may pass through probate, with the new owner determined by the will (or state intestacy law if there is no will)
It is possible to name the beneficiary as the successor account owner. Some 529 plans require the successor owner to be at least 18 years old and a U.S. citizen or permanent resident. If the successor owner is under age 18, the account may be transferred to the beneficiary’s surviving parent, if any, or other legal guardian.
To transfer the account upon death of the account owner, a copy of the death certificate will be required.
The Successor Owner Gets Full Control
Whoever becomes the new account owner gains all the powers of the original owner. They can change the investments, take distributions (including non-qualified distributions payable to themselves) and even change the beneficiary to a different family member. There is no legal requirement that they use the money for the original beneficiary’s education.
That makes the choice of successor owner critical. Pick someone you trust to carry out your intentions for the beneficiary.
Tax Impact of the Death of the 529 Plan Account Owner
When the owner of a 529 plan dies, the assets of the 529 plan are not considered assets of the decedent’s taxable estate, with an important exception.
Contributions to a 529 plan are considered to be a completed gift and are immediately removed from the donor’s estate for federal estate tax purposes. [26 USC 529(c)(2)(A)] The treatment may, however, be different for state estate and inheritance taxes.
Five-year gift-tax averaging, also known as superfunding, lets a donor make a lump-sum contribution and have it treated as occurring proportionately over a five-year period. [26 USC 529(c)(2)(B)] If the donor dies within the five-year period, the portion of the contribution corresponding to the years after the year of death will be included in the donor’s taxable estate. [26 USC 529(c)(4)(C)]
Impact of the Death of the Beneficiary of a 529 Plan
If the beneficiary dies, the account owner keeps the account and has two main options: change the beneficiary to a member of the deceased beneficiary’s family, or take a distribution.
Normally, the earnings portion of a non-qualified distribution is subject to ordinary income tax plus a 10% penalty. But the penalty is waived for distributions made on or after the beneficiary’s death. The earnings portion is still taxable income to whoever receives the distribution — the penalty waiver doesn’t make it tax-free.
Changing the beneficiary to another qualifying family member avoids taxes entirely and keeps the money growing for education (here are the rules for 529 plan rollovers and transfers). And if the funds ultimately go unused, remember that up to $35,000 (lifetime) can be moved into the beneficiary’s Roth IRA under the 529-to-Roth IRA rollover rules, provided the account has been open at least 15 years and the other SECURE 2.0 requirements are met.
We cover all the options for leftover 529 funds here.
Action Plan: Protect Your 529 Plan Now
- Log in to your 529 plan and check whether you’ve named a successor owner. Most people never did.
- Name a primary and backup successor owner if your plan allows it.
- Tell your successor the account exists and where to find it — an account nobody knows about helps nobody.
- If you’ve superfunded, make sure your estate plan accounts for the five-year averaging add-back rule.
- Coordinate with your will or trust. A few plans allow a trust to own the account, which adds another layer of control. If you’re thinking multi-generationally, see how a Dynasty 529 plan can fund education for generations.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens to a 529 plan when the account owner dies?
If the owner named a successor owner, the account transfers to that person outside of probate — the plan typically just requires a death certificate and a transfer form. If no successor was named, the outcome depends on the plan’s rules and state law: the account may pass to the surviving spouse or the beneficiary, or it may go through probate as part of the estate.
Who takes over a 529 plan if no successor owner was named?
It varies by plan. Some plans automatically transfer ownership to the surviving spouse or the beneficiary. Otherwise, the executor of the estate typically requests the transfer, and the new owner is determined by the will or by state intestacy law. Contact the plan administrator directly — each plan has its own procedure.
Does a 529 plan go through probate when the owner dies?
Not if a successor owner was named — the account transfers directly, like a beneficiary designation on an IRA or life insurance policy. Without a successor owner, the account may become part of the probate estate, which can delay access to the funds.
Is a 529 plan included in the deceased owner’s estate for tax purposes?
Generally no. Contributions are treated as completed gifts, so the account isn’t part of the owner’s federal taxable estate. There are two exceptions to watch: superfunded contributions where the owner dies during the five-year averaging period (the remaining years are added back), and state-level rules that may differ from federal treatment.
What happens to a 529 plan if the beneficiary dies?
The account owner keeps control and can either name a new beneficiary from the deceased beneficiary’s family or take a distribution. The usual 10% penalty on the earnings portion of a non-qualified distribution is waived for distributions taken on or after the beneficiary’s death, though the earnings are still subject to ordinary income tax.
What happens to a 529 plan when the owner dies in New York?
The mechanics are the same as anywhere else — New York’s 529 plans allow you to name a successor account owner, and the account transfers outside of probate if you did. For taxes, New York generally follows the federal treatment, so 529 assets aren’t included in the taxable estate. But note that New York has its own estate tax with a much lower exclusion than the federal exemption ($7,350,000 for deaths in 2026) and adds back certain taxable gifts made within three years of death, which can matter for large estates. Consult an estate planning attorney if your estate is near the New York threshold.
Editor: Colin Graves
Reviewed by: Robert Farrington
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