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College and University Discussion
Reply to "I genuinely don't get saving for college for kids"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]So I was a first generation college student. I worked really hard in HS and got decent scholarships for college. I primarily had merit-based aid, with a small amount of need-based aid and then student loans. I went to an expensive school. Costs worked out roughly as such: 40-45 k total 25 merit-based aid 5k need-based aid (Pell grant) 2k work study 10k student loans I worked a lot in college and took out loans. It took me about 10 years to pay back the 40k and it never felt particularly onerous. I went to grad school via a program that paid for my degree entirely. In my husbands case he had a full ride to a comparable school for tuition and his parents paid 10k/year for his room/board. He also has advanced degrees but did a combined ba/ma program and transferred in with a lot of credits so it ended up not costing much extra. Our child is young but very bright and I believe she will be similarly high-performing in high school. We make more money than my family did, certainly, but we don't have dedicated college savings. I guess I am expecting my child to get a lot of merit-based aid and then figure we will be fine paying the rest. I don't get why we would save 300k or whatever when I fully expect her to get merit aid. And if somehow she fizzles out and doesn't get merit-aid, then I would expect her to go to a cheaper school. Am I missing something?[/quote] 1. The most elite schools don’t offer merit aid, only need based. I went to an Ivy and they only offered need based aid and I am pretty sure that that is the case amongst all ivies. You likely make too much money for need based aid. 2. There are state tax benefits to investing in a 529. So if you are anticipating contributing any amount, which it sounds like you are, it’s pretty stupid to do it the way that you are planning on doing. And of course life is long and you never know what you don’t know. [/quote]
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