Anonymous wrote:i have wondered the same thing because we are a blended family which complicates matters. My guess is there probably isn’t much of a market for this because people who need financial aid do not want to pay financial advisors. It’s not like you can charge $500 an hour to people who are applying for FAFSA
Anonymous wrote:I didn't ask "can it be done", I asked for names of people who can advise me what to do. Thanks for answering the question I didn't ask though.![]()
Anonymous wrote:I agree w/ PP that a financial advisor wouldn't really be that helpful.
I have been conscious of our income level and deliberately take less work at times to stay under 150K HHI, but I work several PT jobs.
We also made big purchases that we were planning in the next year or so by Oct to lower our savings. Paid Sep & Dec home tax portions in Sep. Paid full CC balances right before filling out FAFSA. Stuff like that. So, say you are thinking about buying a car in the next year or doing a home renovation, maybe do that now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FAFSA assesses income and assets. Is your income source such that you can make it flexible/significantly reduce for four years? And have enough to live on? If no, a financial advisor win't help you there.
As far as your assets, to shield them from FAFSA, you have to show that they either don't exist or don't belong to you or are otherwise not available to you - e.g. tied up in your retirement funds or spent on an annuity. This is very hard to do without resorting to outright fraud or shooting yourself in the foot somewhere else - e.g. you can buy an annuity, but if you needed it, you'd already bought it.
This question was asked of Mark Kantrowitz, who is an expert on financial aid, and he agreed that in most situations there could only be minor changes on the margins when you try to "structure" your finances. If you are already in a complex situation with trusts, etc, you might have some wiggle room, but if you have a W2 job, a house and some money in the bank, it is what it is. Also, keep in mind that if the school uses CSS profile, it's even harder.
Lol. You could have just said "no".
Anonymous wrote:i have wondered the same thing because we are a blended family which complicates matters. My guess is there probably isn’t much of a market for this because people who need financial aid do not want to pay financial advisors. It’s not like you can charge $500 an hour to people who are applying for FAFSA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FAFSA assesses income and assets. Is your income source such that you can make it flexible/significantly reduce for four years? And have enough to live on? If no, a financial advisor win't help you there.
As far as your assets, to shield them from FAFSA, you have to show that they either don't exist or don't belong to you or are otherwise not available to you - e.g. tied up in your retirement funds or spent on an annuity. This is very hard to do without resorting to outright fraud or shooting yourself in the foot somewhere else - e.g. you can buy an annuity, but if you needed it, you'd already bought it.
This question was asked of Mark Kantrowitz, who is an expert on financial aid, and he agreed that in most situations there could only be minor changes on the margins when you try to "structure" your finances. If you are already in a complex situation with trusts, etc, you might have some wiggle room, but if you have a W2 job, a house and some money in the bank, it is what it is. Also, keep in mind that if the school uses CSS profile, it's even harder.
Lol. You could have just said "no".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FAFSA assesses income and assets. Is your income source such that you can make it flexible/significantly reduce for four years? And have enough to live on? If no, a financial advisor win't help you there.
As far as your assets, to shield them from FAFSA, you have to show that they either don't exist or don't belong to you or are otherwise not available to you - e.g. tied up in your retirement funds or spent on an annuity. This is very hard to do without resorting to outright fraud or shooting yourself in the foot somewhere else - e.g. you can buy an annuity, but if you needed it, you'd already bought it.
This question was asked of Mark Kantrowitz, who is an expert on financial aid, and he agreed that in most situations there could only be minor changes on the margins when you try to "structure" your finances. If you are already in a complex situation with trusts, etc, you might have some wiggle room, but if you have a W2 job, a house and some money in the bank, it is what it is. Also, keep in mind that if the school uses CSS profile, it's even harder.
Lol. You could have just said "no".
Anonymous wrote:FAFSA assesses income and assets. Is your income source such that you can make it flexible/significantly reduce for four years? And have enough to live on? If no, a financial advisor win't help you there.
As far as your assets, to shield them from FAFSA, you have to show that they either don't exist or don't belong to you or are otherwise not available to you - e.g. tied up in your retirement funds or spent on an annuity. This is very hard to do without resorting to outright fraud or shooting yourself in the foot somewhere else - e.g. you can buy an annuity, but if you needed it, you'd already bought it.
This question was asked of Mark Kantrowitz, who is an expert on financial aid, and he agreed that in most situations there could only be minor changes on the margins when you try to "structure" your finances. If you are already in a complex situation with trusts, etc, you might have some wiggle room, but if you have a W2 job, a house and some money in the bank, it is what it is. Also, keep in mind that if the school uses CSS profile, it's even harder.