Frequently Asked Questions

Clear, organized answers about how Well Planned Education works

Browse common questions about eligibility, taxpayer participation, school involvement, and program oversight. Select a category below to quickly find the information you need.

Redirecting taxes under ECCA works as a federal tax credit. It applies directly to a portion of the federal income taxes you already owe.

A charitable donation is a voluntary gift to a nonprofit organization. Donations may qualify as a tax deduction, which reduces your taxable income — not your taxes dollar for dollar.

When funds are redirected through ECCA, they flow to approved nonprofit Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs) like Well Planned Education. By law, SGOs must distribute at least 90% of received funds as student scholarships. These funds are governed by nonprofit compliance standards and federal program guidelines — not discretionary government spending.

In short, a donation is a gift that may reduce income for tax purposes. A tax credit under ECCA directly reduces taxes owed and is structured specifically to support student scholarships.

Explore FAQ Topics

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Select a category below to view related questions and detailed guidance about the ECCA program.

Program Framework

Start here for an overview of how ECCA works

Taxpayer Participation

Guidance for individuals and businesses redirecting taxes

Family Eligibility & Scholarships

Who qualifies and how scholarship funding works

School Participation

What public and private schools need to know

Marketplace & Vendor Participation

How education providers and vendors can qualify

State Participation

Understand how state opt-in affects availability

Governance & Trust

Oversight, compliance, and program transparency

Timeline & Next Steps

Key dates and how to prepare for rollout

Educational Philosophy & Impact

The long-term vision behind ECCA