About K2C

How K2C Works

Kindergarten to College is both automatic and universal. When a student enters kindergarten in San Francisco Unified School District, K2C automatically opens a deposit-only savings account in the child’s name at Citibank with a starter deposit of $50 in each account. There is no paperwork to fill out, and the program does not use social security numbers. For some families, their account with K2C is their only formal bank account with a financial institution. Families with a K2C account can begin saving for post-secondary education immediately by choosing how to deposit from the following methods:

K2C Visit

​​VISIT

Bring your ID and K2C account information to contribute, including cash, at any San Francisco Citibank branch.   

K2C Mail

MAIL

By mail or bank, payable to your child’s name with their K2C account # in the memo section.

K2C Direct Deposit

DIRECT DEPOSIT

Download a form to fill-in and give to your employer to make automatic deductions from your paycheck.

K2C Bill Pay

BILL PAY

Go to your local bank or credit union’s website to set up recurring BillPay or one-time payment.

Students and families can access additional incentive dollars by engaging with their accounts to view activity and save. Families also have the option to transfer funds into a qualified 529 account.

Check out K2C's info card overviewing the program in English, Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese, Arabic, Samoan and Tagalog.  

Why K2C?

Only 44% of students from low-income families go to college or vocational school, compared to 79% of high-income students. High-income students not only enroll in college at a higher rate, but they are also more than 3.5x more likely  to graduate by age 24. Compared to high school graduates, college graduates with an AA degree earn $495,000 more over their lifetime, and those with a BA degree earn $1 million more.  

K2C is working to close the gap in college and vocational school enrollment by providing every child entering kindergarten with a Children’s Savings Account (CSA) seeded with $50 toward their future education. CSAs are long-term savings accounts that help children build aspirations and savings for education after high school.  

K2C has inspired CSA programs across the country, with 121 active CSA programs reaching more than 5.8 million children in 39 states, including municipal programs in Oakland, Los Angeles and New York City, and statewide programs in California, Maine, and Pennsylvania.  

Does K2C Work?

The first class of kindergartners who received K2C accounts in 2011 graduated from high school in 2023. More than 2,800 graduates from the classes of 2023 and 2024 have used $1.4 million from their K2C accounts to help pay for college or vocational school. To date, there are more than 54,000 students with K2C accounts, who have $17 million saved for their future education. 

K2C was inspired by research showing that savings for future education—even small amounts—can improve the odds that low- and moderate income students will attend and complete college. K2C is the first universal, opt-out CSA to see a group of students all the way through from kindergarten to high school graduation. Initial findings demonstrate that K2C significantly boosts students’ college enrollment and on-time high school graduation. Learn more about K2C’s impacts here.

Programs like K2C can help families see college as an achievable goal while their children are still young. And importantly, parents’ and children’s educational expectations are an important predictor of children’s later academic achievement. CSA participation is also linked to increases in reading and math scores among low-income youth. CSAs are even associated with better health for children and parents

Families with CSAs also engage in more planning and saving for college. Families with CSAs are 5 times more likely to save for their children’s future education and have 3.4 times as much money set aside compared to those without.  

Saving in a CSA can also help young people minimize student debt, an important outcome since indebted college graduates accumulate less wealth than do graduates who did not borrow to finance their degrees.   

With K2C, San Francisco invests in students, because they have a future worth saving for.