Anonymous wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought that ED doesn't mean you won't get need-based aid. If you're making $10,000 and get into Harvard ED, you're not paying a cent.
But you won't be able to negotiate, and it may reduce the amount of merit aid.
Anonymous wrote:OP, a lot of families price shop for college; but a decent proportion of us don't. Most schools that have ED don't give merit anyway, so at those schools you will be paying what the net price calculator determines you can pay whether you get in ED or RD. The only difference is the higher odds in ED.
Anonymous wrote:OP, a lot of families price shop for college; but a decent proportion of us don't. Most schools that have ED don't give merit anyway, so at those schools you will be paying what the net price calculator determines you can pay whether you get in ED or RD. The only difference is the higher odds in ED.
Anonymous wrote:we have a neighbor, their child wanted to go to a reasonably top-ish university. Got in early decision. Great!
Find out afterwards they end up being charged what I think seems like the max this couple can possibly pay with loans. Think like the above $70K ones you read about and then add on room and board, nickel and dime stuff, etc. YOW.
Is that what you get by going early decision? A trade off between admission and maximum payment, basically?
Anonymous wrote:we have a neighbor, their child wanted to go to a reasonably top-ish university. Got in early decision. Great!
Find out afterwards they end up being charged what I think seems like the max this couple can possibly pay with loans. Think like the above $70K ones you read about and then add on room and board, nickel and dime stuff, etc. YOW.
Is that what you get by going early decision? A trade off between admission and maximum payment, basically?
Anonymous wrote:we have a neighbor, their child wanted to go to a reasonably top-ish university. Got in early decision. Great!
Find out afterwards they end up being charged what I think seems like the max this couple can possibly pay with loans. Think like the above $70K ones you read about and then add on room and board, nickel and dime stuff, etc. YOW.
Is that what you get by going early decision? A trade off between admission and maximum payment, basically?