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Millions More Disabled Americans Will Be Eligible for This Tax-Free Savings Account

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It will soon be easier for millions of disabled Americans to save money without jeopardizing their government disability benefits.

ABLE accounts — short for Achieving a Better Life Experience — allow people with qualifying disabilities to save money in tax-favored accounts similar to 529 college savings plans.

A major caveat has kept these investment-and-savings accounts out of reach for millions of Americans: The account holder’s disability must have developed before the age of 26.

Now, through the newly enacted ABLE Age Adjustment Act — which was tucked inside the massive omnibus spending package that passed last month — the age cutoff will be raised to 46 in the coming years. Advocates expect this change to expand eligibility to as many as 8 million more disabled people, including upwards of 1 million veterans who developed disabilities later in life.

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Keep in mind

Disability advocates say ABLE accounts are woefully underutilized, largely due to the age threshold of developing the disability. Currently, an estimated 8 million disabled Americans are eligible for an ABLE account. But according to industry research, fewer than 150,000 of them have opened one.

When the plan was initially drafted, the age limit did not exist but was later added into the 2014 legislation that created the ABLE program. Since then, advocates like Edward Mitchell — one of Money's "Changemakers" in 2022 — have been fighting to increase the age limit.

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