USE AN ABLE ACCOUNT FOR QUALIFIED DISABILITY EXPENSES

LEARN HOW TO USE AN ABLE ACCOUNT AS AN ALTERNATIVE OR COMPANION TO A SPECIAL NEEDS TRUST (SNT) FOR DISABILITY-RELATED EXPENSES LIKE FOOD, HOUSING, TRANSPORTATION AND MORE.

Manage your spending without impacting your government benefits with an ABLE account. ABLE funds can pay for education, housing, transportation, employment, assistive technology and adaptive equipment, health, prevention and wellness, legal and financial services, funeral and burial, basic living expenses and more. Be sure to keep good records of all your spending, because the IRS has the right to ask for verification for each expense. An expense is qualified if it meets all 3 requirements:

EXAMPLES OF QUALIFIED EDUCATION EXPENSES

EXAMPLES OF QUALIFIED HOUSING EXPENSES

EXAMPLES OF QUALIFIED EMPLOYMENT EXPENSES

EXAMPLES OF ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY AND ADAPTIVE EQUIPMENT

EXAMPLES OF QUALIFIED HEALTH, PREVENTION AND WELLNESS EXPENSES

IMPACT ON FEDERAL BENEFITS

Most federal benefits disregard or favorably treat ABLE assets – so you have a better chance of becoming and remaining eligible for them. Supplemental Security Income (SSI): SSI disregards up to $100,000 in ABLE account assets. SSI payments will be suspended if the beneficiary's account balance exceeds $100,000, but SSI eligibility will not be terminated. ABLE funds used for housing expenses will not affect SSI payments, as they're not counted as income or in-kind support maintenance. ABLE distributions intended for housing must be spent in the month they are taken. Medicaid: Medicaid disregards ABLE assets when determining eligibility, and Medicaid benefits are not suspended if the ABLE account balance exceeds $100,000. At the end of the designated beneficiary's life, the ABLE account becomes part of the estate and is subject to Medicaid payback. Each state's Medicaid payback policy may differ, and some choose not to recapture at all. Medicaid may become a creditor of the account but is not the beneficiary, so Medicaid can only ask for payback for expenses incurred while the account was open. Executors can pay outstanding (QDE) bills and funeral and burial expenses from the ABLE account prior to Medicaid payback. There is no "named beneficiary," so a will, executor, and the probate process will dictate where any remaining funds go.

ACTION STEPS

Neither Voya nor is affiliated companies or representatives provide tax or legal advice. Please consult a tax advisor or attorney before making a tax-related investment/insurance decision. * Financial Professionals are Investment Advisor Representatives of and offer securities and investment advisory services through Voya Financial Advisors, Inc., (VFA) (member SIPC).