So between now and when first DC would go to college I have reason to buy a LOT of stuff then to get my net worth down! Challenge accepted!! |
We aren't applying as we cannot afford that. |
Debatable details aside, it's great to see the cartel smashed and schools competing on price. |
You need to consume it, not just buy it. And the overhead cost of doing so is more than just paying the tuition. |
"Typical" for Americans, NOT "typical" for Ivy League students. |
No. You are very wealthy. |
i don't know the answer, but you are not the target audience. NW 5 million, no free ride for you. |
With the smarts you're demonstrating here, and the assumption that nature plays a significant part in your kid's aptitude, I'd say your DC's chance of getting into Harvard is vanishingly small. Come to think of it, you aren't doing so hot in the nurture department, either. TL;DR - don't worry about that Harvard charges, it won't be an issue for you. |
So weird that they didn't keep it a secret. Now they'll be stuck with all these extra applicants who think Harvard is affordable. Some of them might even be accepted (need blind, oops!) and lose Harvard a bucket of money! Sad! |
Easier to do than think to buy bunch of worthless stuff! Question- what happens when divorced and if court order says parents will split college cost? Do schools say “student family can pay in full” if 1 parent has lots of $ or do they look at each parent separately so 1 amount for parent who is crazy rich and other amount for parent who has no savings and makes say <$50? |
Most generous private universities consider the income and assets of both parents in determining financial need. How the parents figure out who is paying what will be up to the parents. |
I do think schools should have to say it’s more than just if make less than $150k. I get schools say it bc sounds good for marketing reasons, but would be more appropriate to say less than 150k and assets less than $X, which would be more fair disclosure. |
00 Yes, and maybe even lower. So the deal of tuition free for <$200k income is more of a marketing thing than a real benefit for families making $150k-$200k. |
I wonder what the net price would be for someone making 250k or right outside the limits. Does it jump up from free to 60k+ or is there an incremental increase? |
Assets also matter. Need-based aid at top privates is never, ever only about income. Use Harvard's Net Price Calculator if you would like to see an estimate. |