How to Give Money to Students and Avoid Gift Tax

Learn proven strategies to support students financially without triggering IRS gift taxes using exclusions and smart planning.

By Medha deb
Created on

Supporting students with financial gifts is a generous way to help with education costs, but the IRS gift tax rules can complicate matters. Fortunately, multiple exclusions allow you to give substantial amounts tax-free. In 2026, the

annual gift tax exclusion

is $19,000 per recipient, enabling tax-free gifts to unlimited students without reporting. Beyond that, unlimited exclusions for direct tuition and medical payments, plus special 529 plan rules, provide even more flexibility. This guide covers all key strategies to maximize your support while minimizing tax exposure.

What Is the Gift Tax?

The

gift tax

is a federal tax on transfers of money or property where the donor receives nothing of equal value in return. It applies to lifetime gifts exceeding exclusions to prevent estate tax avoidance. Most donors never pay gift tax due to the

annual exclusion

($19,000 in 2026) and a massive

lifetime exemption

($15 million per person). Gifts under the annual limit count against neither; excess reduces the lifetime exemption but incurs no tax until exhausted.

Key facts:

  • Gift tax rates range from 18% to 40% on amounts exceeding the lifetime exemption.
  • Donor, not recipient, is responsible; recipients don’t report gifts as income.
  • File

    Form 709

    for gifts over $19,000, even if no tax is due.
  • Married couples can “split” gifts, doubling to $38,000 per recipient.

Annual Gift Tax Exclusion

The simplest way to give money to students tax-free is the

annual exclusion

. In 2026, individuals can gift up to

$19,000

per student (or any recipient) without tax or reporting. Married couples qualify for $38,000 combined via gift-splitting on Form 709. You can give to as many students as desired—e.g., $19,000 each to 10 grandchildren totals $190,000 tax-free.
YearAnnual Exclusion (Individual)Couple
2025$19,000$38,000
2026$19,000$38,000

Direct cash, checks, or assets qualify if given by December 31. For appreciated assets like stocks, note the recipient inherits your cost basis, potentially triggering capital gains tax on sale—unlike inheritance, which gets a step-up in basis.

Unlimited Exclusion for Tuition and Medical Expenses

Pay

tuition directly to a qualified educational institution

(accredited colleges, universities, vocational schools) for

unlimited tax-free amounts

. This bypasses both annual and lifetime limits. Covers only tuition—not books, supplies, dorms, or meals.

Example: Pay $60,000 tuition for your granddaughter’s medical degree directly to the school, plus $19,000 cash under annual exclusion—total $79,000 tax-free. Medical expenses paid directly to providers (doctors, hospitals) also qualify unlimited.

  • Requirements: Payments must be direct; reimbursements don’t qualify.
  • Students: Any individual (related or not); no age limit.
  • Proof: Keep receipts showing payment to institution/provider.

This strategy shines for high-tuition private schools but misses investment growth potential.

Using 529 Plans for Accelerated Gifting

**529 plans** offer tax-free growth for education expenses and special gift rules. Contribute up to

$95,000

in 2026 ($19,000 x 5) in one year, treated as spread over five years. No additional gifts to that beneficiary for four years, or excess becomes taxable.

Married couples: Up to $190,000 ($95,000 each). Earnings grow tax-deferred; qualified withdrawals (tuition, books, room/board, up to $10,000 K-12, apprenticeships) are tax-free. Change beneficiary to family member if needed.

529 vs. Direct Tuition Payments

Feature529 PlanDirect Tuition
Tax-Free AmountUp to $95,000 (5-year)Unlimited
Investment GrowthYesNo
Covered ExpensesTuition, books, housing, etc.Tuition only
FlexibilityHigh (change beneficiary)Low

File Form 709 to elect 5-year averaging. Ideal for grandparents funding multi-year college.

Gift Tax Rates and Lifetime Exemption

If gifts exceed exclusions/exemptions, rates apply progressively:

Taxable Amount Over ExemptionRate
$0 – $10,00018%
$10,001 – $20,00020%
$20,001 – $40,00022%
$40,001 – $60,00024%
$60,001 – $80,00026%
$80,001 – $100,00028%
$100,001 – $150,00030%
$150,001 – $250,00032%
$250,001 – $500,00034%
$500,001 – $750,00037%
$750,001 – $1M39%
Over $1M40%

Lifetime exemption: $15 million (2026), unified with estate tax. Excess gifts reduce it; tax only on final exceedance.

Other Tax-Free Gifting Strategies

  • Married Couples: Gift-split to double annual exclusion without using lifetime exemption.
  • Trusts: Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts (SLATs) fund with exemption amount for tax-free growth outside estate.
  • Loans: Interest-free loans over $10,000 may be deemed gifts; charge IRS Applicable Federal Rate.
  • Joint Property: Adding joint tenant can trigger gift if they can sever interest.

Reporting Requirements: When to File Form 709

File

Form 709

by April 15 (or October 15 with extension) for:
  • Gifts >$19,000 (even if exemption covers).
  • 5-year 529 elections.
  • Gift-splitting.

List all gifts; track lifetime total. No tax due until exemption exhausted.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What is the 2026 gift tax annual exclusion?

$19,000 per donor per recipient; $38,000 for couples.

Can I pay tuition and give cash tax-free?

Yes—unlimited direct tuition + $19,000 annual cash.

How much can I contribute to a 529 plan tax-free in one year?

Up to $95,000 individual ($190,000 couple) via 5-year averaging.

Does the recipient pay tax on gifts?

No, donor responsibility only; not income to recipient.

What if I gift stock? Capital gains?

Recipient gets your basis; sell may trigger gains. Inheritance steps up basis.

Do books or room/board qualify for unlimited exclusion?

No—tuition only. Use 529 or annual exclusion.

Consult Professionals for Complex Gifts

While these strategies work for most, high-net-worth donors should consult estate attorneys or financial advisors. Rules change (e.g., exemptions sunset post-2025 unless extended), and state taxes may apply. Integrate gifting into broader estate plans for maximum efficiency.

References

  1. The Gift Tax – TurboTax Tax Tips & Videos — Intuit TurboTax. 2025. https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tips/estates/the-gift-tax/L1sFpFeXV
  2. Giving to Family: Tax Efficient Gifting Strategies — Commerce Trust Company. 2025. https://www.commercetrustcompany.com/research-and-insights/articles/giving-to-family-tax-efficient-gifting-strategies-for-your-estate-plan
  3. The Estate Tax and Lifetime Gifting — Charles Schwab. 2025. https://www.schwab.com/learn/story/estate-tax-and-lifetime-gifting
  4. Gift Tax Limit 2026: How Much Money Can You Gift? — SmartAsset. 2026-01-01. https://smartasset.com/retirement/gift-tax-limits
  5. Gift Tax, Explained: 2025 and 2026 Exemptions and Rates — SmartAsset. 2025. https://smartasset.com/estate-planning/gift-tax-explained-2021-exemption-and-rates
Medha Deb is an editor with a master's degree in Applied Linguistics from the University of Hyderabad. She believes that her qualification has helped her develop a deep understanding of language and its application in various contexts.

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