I chose a Coverdell ESA plan, with the following in mind:
1) Possible use for pre-college educational expenses.
2) Complete flexibility and control over investments.
3) Can be done through almost any brokerage
4) $2000 is the most I plan on investing annually anyway. If that changes, it is possible to contribute to a 529 too.
5) An ESA can be done with absolutely no annual fees or commissions, depending on investments and brokerage chosen of course.
I am aware of the sunsetting contribution limits, but that's years away so I'm not overly concerned. If the $500 max is not revoked, then I investigate the 529 choices again at that time.
In addition to revoking the $500 limit, I'd like to see occasional raises in the max contribution to match the increasing costs of college tuition and expenses. The IRA program just had a similar increase, from $4k to $5k annual. The same need could easily be calculated for ESA.
"The problem with an annual max contribution of 2k
is that many mutual funds have a higher minimum initial investment than
that. Fidelity doesn't offer CESA accounts, I'm assuming, because none
of the mutual funds they offer have a minimum initial investment lower
than $2500."
That's a flaw of Fidelity's, not the fault of the ESA program. Most mutual funds have a lower initial investment requirement for IRA accounts, including ESAs. There are very few mainstream funds that require $2000 or more for IRA / ESA accounts; $1000 seems to be the norm, but some can be found for $100 - $500.
Vanguard is another company with very high initial investment requirements, even for IRAs. Huge Thumbs-Down from me.
There is a recent M* article with a list of recommended funds with very low entry points. The article is targeted at "rebate" check investors, but the same would apply to people opening ESA accounts.
"So you can imagine the difficulty of trying to fund a CESA with an annual contribution of only 500 bucks."
You're right. For $1000 you can invest in almost anything, but at $500 the pickings are slim. Maybe none in some fund categories.
Best Wishes,
-Bob