Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? It is either that or your assets raising your EFC. If the issue is assets, transfer savings to retirement, pay off debt, or pay down the mortgage on your primary home. Kids should have almost no savings, though retirement savings, including ROTHs, are not counted against them when factoring in assets.
HHI around $350k but have 4 rental properties I had to list as with.
You must be trolling us! You have 4 rental properties PLUS a high salary and you can’t afford to pay for college? You should be able to pay at least $60k per year.
I also have two other kids currently in college and two younger kids I am paying daycare for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? It is either that or your assets raising your EFC. If the issue is assets, transfer savings to retirement, pay off debt, or pay down the mortgage on your primary home. Kids should have almost no savings, though retirement savings, including ROTHs, are not counted against them when factoring in assets.
HHI around $350k but have 4 rental properties I had to list as with.
You must be trolling us! You have 4 rental properties PLUS a high salary and you can’t afford to pay for college? You should be able to pay at least $60k per year.
I also have two other kids currently in college and two younger kids I am paying daycare for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? It is either that or your assets raising your EFC. If the issue is assets, transfer savings to retirement, pay off debt, or pay down the mortgage on your primary home. Kids should have almost no savings, though retirement savings, including ROTHs, are not counted against them when factoring in assets.
HHI around $350k but have 4 rental properties I had to list as with.
You must be trolling us! You have 4 rental properties PLUS a high salary and you can’t afford to pay for college? You should be able to pay at least $60k per year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? It is either that or your assets raising your EFC. If the issue is assets, transfer savings to retirement, pay off debt, or pay down the mortgage on your primary home. Kids should have almost no savings, though retirement savings, including ROTHs, are not counted against them when factoring in assets.
HHI around $350k but have 4 rental properties I had to list as with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just did my DD FAFSA today and they gave us an EFC of 096832. They are trying to say we can contribute $96,832 towards her college education which we surely cannot afford. Not sure how FAFSA calculated EFC but it is not reasonable.
This is why many upper middle class kids go to in state public colleges.
UMD Cost of Attendance $28,000/year
https://financialaid.umd.edu/resources-policies/cost-attendance
Anonymous wrote:Just did my DD FAFSA today and they gave us an EFC of 096832. They are trying to say we can contribute $96,832 towards her college education which we surely cannot afford. Not sure how FAFSA calculated EFC but it is not reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? It is either that or your assets raising your EFC. If the issue is assets, transfer savings to retirement, pay off debt, or pay down the mortgage on your primary home. Kids should have almost no savings, though retirement savings, including ROTHs, are not counted against them when factoring in assets.
HHI around $350k but have 4 rental properties I had to list as with.
Oh jfc. You or your children are not the intended recipients of grants or subsidized loans. I can not believe you have the audacity to complain.
You'll pay, your kids will take out unsub loans (which you will likely pay off for them later bc you absolutely do have the money), you'll take loans out against your properties or other assets or do whatever it is that wealthy people do.
Anonymous wrote:Per the suggestion of transferring assets to retirement, aren’t there annual limits on that for both 401ks and IRAs? If you’ve got like $200k in a stock market account, you can’t just transfer that to retirement accounts, can you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? It is either that or your assets raising your EFC. If the issue is assets, transfer savings to retirement, pay off debt, or pay down the mortgage on your primary home. Kids should have almost no savings, though retirement savings, including ROTHs, are not counted against them when factoring in assets.
HHI around $350k but have 4 rental properties I had to list as with.
Anonymous wrote:How much is your income? It is either that or your assets raising your EFC. If the issue is assets, transfer savings to retirement, pay off debt, or pay down the mortgage on your primary home. Kids should have almost no savings, though retirement savings, including ROTHs, are not counted against them when factoring in assets.
Anonymous wrote:Just did my DD FAFSA today and they gave us an EFC of 096832. They are trying to say we can contribute $96,832 towards her college education which we surely cannot afford. Not sure how FAFSA calculated EFC but it is not reasonable.
Table A6: Parents’ Contribution from AAI
If the parents’ AAI is — Then the parents’ contribution from AAI is—
Less than -$3,409 -$750
$-3,409 to $17,000 22% of AAI
$17,001 to $21,400 $3,740 + 25% of AAI over $17,000
$21,401 to $25,700 $4,840 + 29% of AAI over $21,400
$25,701 to $30,100 $6,087 + 34% of AAI over $25,700
$30,101 to $34,500 $7,583 + 40% of AAI over $30,100
$34,501 or more $9,343 + 47% of AAI over $34,500