The IRS Loophole That Lets You Give Your Kids Unlimited Money Tax-Free (It’s Not the $19,000 Gift Limit)

Allen Mueller, a recent guest on the Catching Up to FI podcast episode on intergenerational wealth, put it bluntly when host Bill Yount asked how to move serious money to adult children without triggering gift tax paperwork: “If your child has education bills, you can pay any amount directly to the university or the educational institution, and it’s not a gift to your child.” The same applies to medical bills.
A parent who writes a $60,000 tuition check to their kid, who then pays the university, has used up three years of the $19,000 annual gift exclusion and started chipping at their lifetime estate exemption. However, that same parent who writes the check directly to the bursar’s office has, in IRS terms, made a non-event.
How Parents Can Transfer More Than the Annual Gift Limit
Under IRC Section 2503(e), payments made directly to a qualifying educational institution for tuition, or directly to a medical provider for care, are excluded from gift tax entirely. They sit outside the annual exclusion and outside the lifetime estate and gift exemption, which for 2026 is $15,000,000 per individual. As Mueller put it, “it’s just like it never happened from a tax perspective, from a gift perspective, because you’re paying directly.”
Consider a realistic scenario. A grandparent wants to fund a grandchild’s private medical school: $75,000 a year in tuition for four years. Written as cash gifts to the student, that is $300,000 of taxable gifts. After applying the $19,000 annual exclusion each year, roughly $224,000 eats into the lifetime exemption and requires a gift tax return annually.
Written as four checks directly to the medical school’s bursar, the same $300,000 produces zero reportable gifts, zero exemption use, and zero forms. The grandparent can still hand the student $19,000 in cash on top of that, and a spouse can do the same, stacking another $19,000 from each donor.
The mechanic also covers health insurance premiums paid directly to the insurer and out-of-pocket medical bills paid directly to the hospital or doctor. Tuition only covers tuition, not room and board, books, or a laptop. Those still count as gifts.
One Mistake That Turns a Tax-Free Transfer Into a Taxable Gift
Paying off your child’s existing student loans does not qualify. The IRS treats loan repayment as a transfer to your child, not a direct tuition payment. If you paid off $50,000 of your child’s student loans, only $19,000 of it would be excluded under the annual gift exclusion.
If you want to use this strategy for an adult child already in graduate school, ask the registrar whether you can pay the upcoming semester directly before they sign new loan paperwork.
The Retirement-Funding Strategy Parents Can Use Instead
Host Bill Yount raised a separate idea on the same episode: parents who want to boost a working child’s retirement savings can give them cash to replace the dollars the child diverts into a 401(k). “You can’t directly contribute to a 401(k), but in my mind, you can indirectly contribute to their 401(k),” he said. Mueller agreed: “Dollars are fungible. A dollar in this account is the same as a dollar in that account.”
This still counts as a gift to the child, so it lives inside the $19,000 annual exclusion. The leverage is behavioral: your child captures their full employer match and gets decades of tax-deferred growth on money that, without your gift, would have gone to rent.
What Families Should Know
The key lesson from Mueller’s discussion is that many families focus on the annual gift-tax exclusion while overlooking one of the most powerful wealth-transfer tools already built into the tax code. By paying tuition and qualifying medical expenses directly to the institution or provider, parents and grandparents can transfer substantial amounts of wealth without using any of their annual exclusion or lifetime exemption.
A direct payment to a university can move tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars to the next generation without creating a taxable gift. The same payment routed through the child first can trigger an entirely different set of tax rules.




