Outside of the triangle, it is. |
Fine. If you are making $190k in NC (or most other places) you can afford to contribute something for your child's college education or you are doing something really wrong. If you can't it means there is either a very unique situation or you took out way too much of your own loans (not my fault) or you spent too much on your car and vacation and golf club membership and everything else that should have been saved for college. When doing the math on this they should also be calculating an implied salary for a non-working spouse. I know that private K-12 schools often do this when calculating aid. But again, they are welcome to do what they want to achieve the goals they want, so I guess it stinks to be me. |
I am thinking the same. $200k is a high salary for most of the United States. I am surprised they would offer free tuition to these families. Well those families certainly hit gold! |
I just looked up homes on Zillow for Charlotte NC. There are a plethora of homes in the $300-500k range!! |
Emory has the same problem as Wake. It had a hard time competing with UGA and GA Tech for top Georgia students. |
Yes, and that is amplified by the fact that strong students can get the HOPE/Zell Miller scholarship and go to UGA/GA Tech (or whatever other GA state school they fancy) for free or a very reduced amount. Not logical to choose Emory unless you have a TON of money to burn |
North Carolina doesn't tax pensions, either. Early retirement with a pension in NC shortly before kids are college age sounds good. |
Who is paying for these then? |
That's what our neighbors did about 15 years ago, moved to NC before the kids junior year because they knew she wanted to go to a NC school. |
students on need based financial aid will have work-study as part of the package, at Wake and almost every school. This new "deal" is need based aid, with a generous cutoff. Heck my full pay kids have campus jobs as do most of their friends, on aid or not. |
Is it income only and doesn’t include assets? We always figured that we wouldn’t get aid because we have significant assets, but will likely be retired or semiretired when the kids go to college. Would we still qualify for these programs if we lived instate and had a low enough income? Or, does it still use the FAFSA and exclude people based on assets. |
Great question. I'm not sure. But they don't want to get into details like that - ruins the wonderful headline that makes them look so generous and kind. |