UGMA/UTMA

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Custodial accounts allowing irrevocable gifts to minors without establishing a trust. UGMA (Uniform Gifts to Minors Act) permits cash and securities; UTMA (Uniform Transfers to Minors Act) also permits real estate and other property. Gifts are irrevocable and cannot be changed to a different beneficiary. Assets transfer to minor at age of majority (18 for UGMA, up to 25 for UTMA depending on state). Subject to kiddie tax: unearned income over $2,700 taxed at parent's marginal rate until age 19 (or 24 if full-time student).

Example

A grandparent opens a UTMA account for their 10-year-old grandchild with $50,000. The grandparent is named custodian. The account grows to $75,000, generating $3,500 in annual dividends. The first $2,700 of unearned income is taxed at the child's rate; the remaining $800 is taxed at the parent's marginal rate (kiddie tax). At age 21 (state-determined), the account legally belongs to the now-adult child. The gift was irrevocable and the beneficiary cannot be changed.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse UGMA/UTMA with 529 plans regarding beneficiary changes (UGMA/UTMA are irrevocable; 529 can change beneficiaries). Another confusion: kiddie tax applies to unearned income only (dividends, interest, capital gains), not W-2 wages from the minor's job. Also commonly missed: covered calls are permitted in UGMA/UTMA accounts, but buying options is prohibited. FAFSA treatment is worse for UGMA/UTMA (20% assessment) vs. 529 plans (5.64% assessment).

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying which assets can be held in UGMA vs. UTMA accounts (UTMA allows real estate)
  • Determining which trading strategies are prohibited in custodial accounts (margin, short selling, naked options, buying options)
  • Calculating kiddie tax: distinguishing the $2,700 threshold and when income is taxed at parent's rate
  • Understanding irrevocability: gifts cannot be taken back and beneficiaries cannot be changed
  • Comparing UGMA/UTMA with 529 plans for FAFSA impact (20% vs. 5.64% assessment rates)

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Kiddie tax threshold (unearned income) $2,700 (2025-2026) Unearned income over this amount is taxed at parent's marginal rate
Kiddie tax age limit Age 19 (or 24 if full-time student) Kiddie tax applies until minor reaches this age
Age of majority (UGMA) Age 18 in most states Assets transfer to minor at this age; state laws vary
Age of transfer (UTMA) Up to age 25 State-determined; can be extended beyond age 18 up to age 25
FAFSA assessment rate 20% of account value Treated as student assets (higher impact than 529 plans at 5.64%)
Number of custodians One custodian per account Only one custodian and one minor per UGMA/UTMA account

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Jennifer wants to set aside $100,000 for her 8-year-old daughter's future education and is comparing UGMA accounts with 529 plans. She's concerned about maintaining control over the funds if her daughter decides not to attend college. Her daughter may also need funds for private high school in 3 years. Jennifer's brother (the child's uncle) has offered to serve as custodian. Which recommendation would be most appropriate?

Question 2

Under current tax law (2025-2026), at what level of unearned income does the kiddie tax begin to apply, causing the excess to be taxed at the parent's marginal rate?

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Question 3

A custodian of a UTMA account wants to generate additional income and is considering several options. The account currently holds 500 shares of a blue-chip stock valued at $50 per share. Which of the following strategies would be permitted in the UTMA account?

Question 4

All of the following statements about UGMA/UTMA custodial accounts are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A custodian is managing a UTMA account for a 16-year-old with $60,000 in assets that generated $4,200 in dividends and interest last year. The child also earned $3,000 in W-2 wages from a part-time job. The parents are in the 32% tax bracket. Which of the following statements are accurate regarding taxation?

1. The child's $3,000 in W-2 wages will be taxed at the parent's 32% rate
2. The first $2,700 of unearned income will be taxed at the child's rate
3. The remaining $1,500 of unearned income ($4,200 - $2,700) will be taxed at the parent's 32% rate
4. The child must file a tax return using their own Social Security number

💡 Memory Aid

Remember "UGMA/UTMA = Unchangeable Gift": Once given, it's irrevocable (can't take back or change beneficiaries) and transfers at age of majority (money belongs to the kid, ready or not!). Think "Kiddie Tax at 2700": Unearned income over $2,700 gets taxed at parent's rate. Key distinction: UGMA = securities only, UTMA = real estate too.

Related Concepts

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Where This Appears on the Exam

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