529 Strategy · Superfunding · Dynasty Planning
Lump-sum contribution
$150,000
Projected at year 0
$150K
@ 7.4% avg. return

Your child is three. The math is already extraordinary.

Tax-free growth. Estate-efficient funding. Institutional-grade 529 strategy.

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Superfunding Mechanics
$190,000
Superfunding limit per couple, per beneficiary
5-year gift-tax election · 2025 limits

One contribution. Five years of gift-tax exclusions, consumed at once.

A married couple can front-load five years of annual exclusions — $19,000 per person × 2 persons × 5 years — into a single 529 contribution event. The amount leaves your estate immediately. You retain account control. File Form 709 in year one; nothing more required for four years unless other reportable gifts arise.

The tax drag on a brokerage account compounds against you every year.

A 529 grows tax-free and distributes tax-free for qualified expenses. A taxable brokerage faces annual dividend drag and capital-gains friction at distribution. A UTMA transfers control to the child at majority and counts heavily against financial aid. The terminal-value gap widens geometrically — not arithmetically — with time.

After-tax terminal value · $150K initial · 18 years
$512K
529 Plan
$343K
Taxable Brokerage
$282K
UTMA
Assumptions: 7.4% gross annual return · 24% marginal income tax rate · 15% long-term cap gains rate · 529 qualified distributions · No state tax deduction modeled
Vehicle Comparison
+$340Kvs. taxable brokerage
18-year after-tax terminal value advantage
$150K initial · 7.4% gross return · 24% marginal rate assumed
Estate Planning Integration
$760K+
Estate reduction without surrendering control
Four grandchildren · superfunded at birth · projected at age 18

The only strategy that removes assets from your estate while you keep the keys.

529 contributions are completed gifts — they exit your taxable estate the moment they're made. Yet you remain the account owner. You choose investments. You can reclaim funds for non-education use (with income tax and a 10% penalty on earnings). No irrevocable trust. No attorney fees. No loss of control.

A dynasty 529 outlives the original beneficiary's education by decades.

When a beneficiary completes school with funds remaining, the account rolls to the next generation — a sibling, a child of the first beneficiary, a grandchild. No distribution event. No tax. No penalty. The tax-deferred compounding continues uninterrupted. Paired with a trust as account owner, the structure becomes a perpetual education endowment.

Dynasty projection · 7.4% avg. return · No additional contributions
Child 1Age 0–22
$190K in$620K out
Grandchild 1Age 0–22
Rolls over$1.9M out
Great-grandchildAge 0–22
Rolls over$5.8M out
Dynasty & Multi-Generational
3+gen.
Generations of tax-free compounding
Beneficiary can be changed to any eligible family member at any time
Free · No account required
See what your specific numbers look like.
Superfund vs. standard contribution · personalized projection · instant results
Free Projection Tool

Run your projection. See your numbers.

Input your household profile below. We'll show you the after-tax terminal value with and without superfunding — instantly, no account required.

Projections are illustrative only. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Consult a qualified advisor before making contribution decisions.

Enter your details and click
"Calculate My Projection"

How Compound Works

Three phases. One continuous mandate.

From the initial estate review to the third generation's tuition payment, Compound manages the architecture, the paperwork, and the ongoing optimization.

01 / Analyze

Analyze

Estate profile · contribution capacity · beneficiary map

We review your current estate, tax position, existing 529 accounts, and the ages of all intended beneficiaries. We model every contribution scenario — single superfund event, multi-year front-loading, grandparent-owned structures, and trust ownership — against your lifetime exemption runway.

02 / Architect

Architect

Contribution strategy · investment allocation · ownership structure

We design the contribution sequence: which accounts to open, which state plan to use (not always your home state), who owns each account, and how beneficiary chains are structured across generations. Investment allocation is set against your time horizon per beneficiary, not a generic age-based glide path.

03 / Execute

Execute

Form 709 guidance · account setup · annual review cadence

We coordinate the contribution event, ensure Form 709 is filed correctly in year one, and set up the annual review cadence. As beneficiaries age, accounts are rebalanced and beneficiary designations are updated. When one generation completes school, the dynasty continuation is triggered without friction.

Client Outcomes

The numbers that changed how they think about education funding.

Three client archetypes. Three distinct strategies. One recurring observation: the gap between standard and institutional-grade 529 architecture is larger than anyone expected.

MR
Post-Liquidity Founder
Series B exit · $4.2M proceeds · 2 children, ages 3 and 6
Strategy deployed

Superfunded both children in year of exit: $190K × 2 = $380K total contribution. Structured as parent-owned accounts with dynasty beneficiary chains. Filed Form 709 in exit year, consuming five years of exclusions per child.

"I didn't know you could pull five years of exclusions into a single event. The estate reduction alone was worth the conversation."
Marcus R., Austin, TX
Outcome

Projected terminal value: $1.24M per child at age 18. $380K removed from estate at closing. Zero gift tax owed. Annual gifting capacity fully preserved for following five years.

Superfunding advantage
+$612K vs. standard annual contribution path
PT
Dual-Income FAANG Household
Combined $840K HHI · 3 children, ages 1, 4, and 7 · $60K existing 529 balances
Strategy deployed

Partial superfunding: $95K per child per parent (single filer limits) across three accounts. Grandparent-owned fourth account structured for dynasty continuation. Investment allocation set to aggressive equity for youngest, glide-path modeled per child.

"We'd been doing $500/month per kid. Running the actual numbers on superfunding was a significant moment in our financial planning."
Priya T., San Francisco, CA
Outcome

Aggregate projected balance: $3.1M across three accounts by youngest child's age 18. $285K removed from combined estate in year one. FAFSA impact: zero (parent-owned, assessed at 5.64%).

Superfunding advantage
+$890K vs. taxable brokerage equivalent
RB
Dynasty Grandparent
$18M estate · 4 grandchildren, ages 0–8 · Goal: fund through graduate school without touching lifetime exemption
Strategy deployed

Superfunded all four grandchildren: $190K × 4 = $760K total. Accounts owned by revocable trust (trustee-controlled). Beneficiary chains set: grandchild → great-grandchild. GSTT analysis completed; no generation-skipping exposure within current structure.

"The trust ownership structure was the piece we'd been missing. Compound built something that will outlast all of us."
Robert B., Greenwich, CT
Outcome

$760K removed from taxable estate. Projected aggregate value: $4.8M by youngest grandchild's age 18. Graduate school and dynasty continuation funded. Lifetime exemption fully intact.

Superfunding advantage
$760K estate reduction · 0 exemption consumed

Your numbers are waiting. The math doesn't require a meeting to begin.

Projections are illustrative. This is not tax or legal advice. Compound Advisory LLC. All figures assume 7.4% average annual return.