529 Day 2026 | Catalis
On 529 Day 2026, Catalis highlights that while state 529 college savings plans are crucial for helping families save for diverse educational expenses amid rising student debt, many still rely on outdated contribution methods like bank transfers and checks, creating friction that deters engagement, and argues that modernizing these plans to integrate seamless digital payment options—mirroring everyday financial behaviors like peer-to-peer payments and digital wallets—is essential to truly meet families where they are and boost enrollment.
Is Your State’s College Savings Plan Keeping Up With How Families Actually Manage Money?
Today is 529 Day — a moment set aside each year to celebrate the power of 529 savings plans, enabling families to save for college, graduate and vocational schools, apprenticeships, K-12 education, post-high school credential programs, and for student loan repayment. Across the country, state 529 programs are marking the occasion with promotions, giveaways, and awareness campaigns designed to bring more families into the fold.
It’s worth pausing to ask a key question: Is the experience those plans deliver still meeting families where they actually are?
The Gap Between How Families Save and How Most Plans Work
Think about how the average family manages money in 2026. They split dinner bills on Venmo, send birthday money through PayPal, and tap their phone at the grocery checkout without opening their wallet. Financial apps, digital wallets, and peer-to-peer payment platforms aren’t novelties anymore—they’re the default.
Now think about how the norm in most state 529 plans is to accept contributions through bank accounts, routing numbers, and paper checks in some cases.
For a generation of parents who haven’t written a check since 2019, that experience creates real friction. And friction, in the world of savings, is expensive. Every extra step between a family’s intention to save and the ability to actually save is an opportunity for them to disengage, or never engage at all.
This isn’t a criticism of the mission behind state 529 savings programs. That mission—helping families build a meaningful financial foundation for their children’s education—has never been more important. With national student debt now approaching $1.84 trillion, the stakes couldn’t be higher. But mission alone doesn’t drive enrollment, the experience does.
Contributions Should Be as Easy as Splitting a Restaurant Bill
Consider one of the most powerful drivers of 529 growth: family gifting. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, and family friends are often eager to contribute to a child’s education savings, particularly around birthdays, graduations, and the holidays. It’s a meaningful gift with lasting value.
But what happens when an aunt who manages her finances entirely through PayPal tries to contribute to her niece’s 529 account? If the state plan doesn’t accept PayPal, the gift doesn’t happen. The contribution that would have grown tax-free for a decade simply doesn’t occur. Not because the family didn’t want to save, but because the plan made it too cumbersome.
State college savings programs that accept PayPal, Venmo, digital wallets, and other modern payment methods remove that friction entirely. They signal to families—especially younger, digitally native parents—that the plan was built for the way they actually live. That signal matters for enrollment, for retention, and for the total assets under management that reflect the program’s long-term health.
The Spending Side Is Just as Important — and Almost Nobody Is Talking About It
Most conversations about improving 529 plans focus on the contribution experience, but rarely do program administrators spend equal energy thinking about what happens at the other end: when the time comes to actually use those savings.
The traditional 529 withdrawal process can be cumbersome: families request a disbursement, wait for funds to transfer, pay out of pocket, and reimburse themselves. For a college freshman navigating a new campus, a new schedule, and new financial responsibilities, that process adds unnecessary stress at exactly the wrong moment.
What if students could simply load funds from their 529 savings onto a prepaid debit card—and use it to pay for books, fees, supplies, and other qualified expenses on the spot?
That’s not a hypothetical. Catalis was the first provider in the market offering a 529-linked prepaid debit card that allows account owners to load their education savings and spend them directly, at the point of need. No waiting. No reimbursement workflow. No gap between when the expense happens and when the family can access their own money.
For state program administrators, this is a meaningful differentiator. It’s a feature that makes the back-end experience as modern and seamless as the best consumer financial apps, and it’s one that families will notice, appreciate, and tell others about.
Catalis Is Built for the Way Families Manage Money Today
At Catalis, we believe that a state 529 plan should be the easiest, most intuitive savings vehicle a family ever uses—not the most outdated. We partner with state programs to bring modern contribution methods, seamless gifting tools, and the first 529-linked prepaid debit card on the market to the families you serve.
Because families who find their state plan easy to use don’t just open accounts, they fund them. They stay enrolled. They tell their neighbors. And over time, they build the kind of savings that actually change outcomes.
Happy 529 Day! Let’s make it easier for every family to save.
Interested in learning how Catalis can modernize your state’s college savings program? Contact us today.
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