Where to invest
Investment ideas for school fees should be mindful of the end goal. As with any financial goal with a fixed deadline and financial requirement, risk should be carefully considered. If you are paying school fees in less than five years, capital preservation is key, in which case cash or cash-like assets are your best option. Use a savings platform to compare interest rates.
With a longer term horizon you can consider more investment risk. Developed markets – while not always smooth sailing – are likely to have less volatility than investments in emerging economies.
The Fidelity Index World passive tracker fund invests across a broad range of developed countries like the US, Japan and European countries including the UK. It offers exposure to large and medium-sized companies including household names like Microsoft, Apple and Amazon.
Blend this choice with a more defensively managed fund, upping the allocation to the defensive option as you approach fee day. Troy Trojan or Ninety One Diversified Income fund are both a step up in risk from cash but suitable for investors looking for capital preservation and total returns.
Education trusts and estate planning
If you are lucky enough to have a larger lump sum, such as those gifted through estate planning, which you wish to use to pay for several children’s education, you could set up an educational trust with the children as beneficiaries.
A trust set up specifically for education means just that – the proceeds have to be used for that purpose, which can give comfort to the grantees. Grandparents may find it more palatable to support grandchildrens’ education rather than leave a lump sum in a will over which they will have no sway.
There are a couple of different ways in which to do this and normally a transfer of cash into a trust up to the inheritance tax threshold of £325,000 per person is free from immediate charge to inheritance tax.
There will be costs involved in setting up and running the trust, which could include ongoing and exit inheritance tax charges, and income and capital gains tax payable on assets in the trust. However, depending on how the trust is structured it may be possible for any income tax and capital gains tax paid on the assets in the trust to be reclaimed using the child’s allowances.
Discounts and bursaries
As well as planning ahead, it is worth speaking to the school of your choice about payment and funding options. Children of parents in the armed forces, duplicate children and children of teachers can often get discounts. Paying for one or more years up front can often mean you can negotiate fees downwards.
If your child is particularly gifted academically, or in sports or music, there are always scholarships to consider. Better get practising that violin concerto.