Totally agree! However, college funds should be aggressive until 3-4 years before college. Then start going less risky as you approach college, but keeping in mind that you have 3 years after they start college before you need to last 25%. So do what is risk appropriate for you, but really go aggressive until they are 14+ is the way to go. In 2016, we knew Kid 1 was 2 years from college, we thought the market would tank with the election, so early Oct we pulled out 75% of Kid1 into less risky investments. Kept Kid 2 100% in aggressive/growth/market. Kid 2 (fully funded for $320K for college starting 6 years later) made $50K in 3 months and it kept growing afterwards. Now we had enough for Kid 1 to attend college of choosing, so we didn't need to be risky. We missed out on gains, but also missed out on potential major losses had market gone the other direction. Hence why we pulled it to "safer" investments. But we lost out on great gains for them. However, we maintained principle and they had $250K for college when they started (they were never going to attend what is now an $85K+ school, so we planned for $60K/year) |
Thank you for sharing OP!
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Yes, but like other "average joe's" who don't spend time lurking in finance forums, we learned this the hard way and several years too late. |
Didn't need to "lurk in a finance forum". A simple google for the last 20 years would inform you that you can self select your funds and that is the better approach. And that you want to keep it aggressively invested until a few years before college starts. Same with 401K---you can be aggressive still when you are 40, because you have 20-25+ years before you will need that money. |
Good job, OP! I started educational trusts (no 529s back then) when both of our children were born. I put all cash gifts to the kids in them and funded them regularly. But, life ensued. Fortunately, I had written the trust language so that the corpus could be used for educational needs along the way. Both kids were SN and needed endless testing, therapy, Exec coaches and tutors, psychiatrists and so on. By the time we hit college, the trusts had been depleted due to the SN needs. But thank heavens for in-state tuition in Virginia! Got both of them through. Full freight. Nothing from FAFSA. No merit. no financial aid but we did it. One is launched. Other in grad school which we are paying for out of savings and income. You did better than we did. |
+1 I put it in the date targeted fund years ago, and the growth was tiny. I pulled some out recently and put it in an equity fund. Kicking myself. |
I'm projected to have about 75-80K with a similar profile (single parent). This gives me hope! |
dp.. so I thought the target funds 10 years out would be invested more aggressively. Turns out, I was wrong. |
OMG, me as well. I just switched at the top the year for my freshman. |
Yep my TSP and 529s are 100% equities! I won't switch to bonds until very late in the game if at all depending on how things are. |
If not for taxes |
That is why you check. Simple to do, but costly if you don't check |
Virginia's 529 plan has a S&P500 index option. |
OP here…I stopped funding when I had 3 years covered for each. I wanted to try and not overfund. For example, Virginia Tech in 2023 said the cost of living off campus is something like $7K. The reality for us was the actual cost is 12K (1K per 12 mos). That 5K delta is not eligible for 529 reimbursement. Whether that is audited I don’t know but I played by the rules and only used $7K for the off campus housing. Overfunding is not necessarily bad, the money could be used for your next child, grad school or you could have it skip a generation. And now you can move some amount into Roth. But I looked at it from an opportunity cost perspective and the money could be used elsewhere. Look at the VA public’s Cost of Attendance (COA). Each school has one. It will give you a good idea of what you should expect. Of course, schools do raise their fees so you have to be aware of that though a few lock-in a rate for four years. |
OP, thanks for sharing so much information. We did a lot of the same things with first kid who starts this fall. First two years are in money market right now. Second two years are still in target date fund.
Younger son is contributing to S&P500 index fund but has a target date account too. We will roll first two years into money market when he’s a senior. We did that with the older one and luckily timed the market well. |