Anonymous wrote:It’s not income if it is used to pay for qualified education expenses. Just bc your expected family contribution is $50,000, doesn’t mean that the school will give you $30,000 of aid. I’m caveating my earlier statement that there may be a difference between what FAFSA considers income and what the IRS considers income bc I haven’t completed FAFSA. We use a grandparent 529 to pay tuition and a portion of her living expenses based on what the school allows. My dd is now in an apartment so we pay the rest out of pocket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you trying to avoid or trying to get with all these unnecessary transfers?
* Our income is too high to get any need-based aid anywhere but the more expensive schools, in that our expected family contribution is $50K-ish. But it is ONLY that aid that would make it possible for one of our kids to attend an elite school. Because we don't have enough money to pay anything more than that (even with the grandparent's' 529.)
* From what I read, if grandparent pays tuition through their 529, it will count as the student's income. The student will need to file taxes, and then we may not qualify for any aid the following year, because a higher percentage of the student's income is counted toward the expected contribution.
* I think if we pay from a 529 of our own it won't count as student income?
Do I have this correct? We really can't pay more than our current expected contribution.
Keep in mind that only elite private universities that are nearly impossible to get into give any substantial grant need-based financial aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you trying to avoid or trying to get with all these unnecessary transfers?
* Our income is too high to get any need-based aid anywhere but the more expensive schools, in that our expected family contribution is $50K-ish. But it is ONLY that aid that would make it possible for one of our kids to attend an elite school. Because we don't have enough money to pay anything more than that (even with the grandparent's' 529.)
* From what I read, if grandparent pays tuition through their 529, it will count as the student's income. The student will need to file taxes, and then we may not qualify for any aid the following year, because a higher percentage of the student's income is counted toward the expected contribution.
* I think if we pay from a 529 of our own it won't count as student income?
Do I have this correct? We really can't pay more than our current expected contribution.
Anonymous wrote:What are you trying to avoid or trying to get with all these unnecessary transfers?