Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In this case, for a 12 year old. No other kids to whom we can pass down any excess balance, and we're hoping to fully fund undergrad. We will be retired when kid is in college, so hoping to make a good guess. Current balance is pretty high, but I'm curious where others stop. If your goal is to fully fund a school that costs $80k per year, would you stop contributing if the balance is less than $320,000 because you assume at least some growth that outpaces inflation?
Well, what is it? Why do people share half-ass info. when asking for advice? This is an anonymous forum!
Anonymous wrote:The withdrawal penalty is only 10% of the gains.
If you put $200K in, and get $300K gains, and only spend $100K (in-state tuition + boarding), the penalty is at most 10% of the gains: 10% *($300K - (60% * 100K)) = $24K, while avoiding any intermediate taxes during the growth phase.
That's a big amount by itself, but not so big in the 20-year scheme of things with avoiding paying all that tuition, and considering the gains were largely unearned free investment income above inflation.
Anonymous wrote:In this case, for a 12 year old. No other kids to whom we can pass down any excess balance, and we're hoping to fully fund undergrad. We will be retired when kid is in college, so hoping to make a good guess. Current balance is pretty high, but I'm curious where others stop. If your goal is to fully fund a school that costs $80k per year, would you stop contributing if the balance is less than $320,000 because you assume at least some growth that outpaces inflation?
Anonymous wrote:We plan on stopping at $500k to fund private and grad school. Whatever is left over, can be passed on to their children.