Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor person here . We max out 401k and IRA , and have little in college savings other than what grandparents put in
Since we are older parents , our children will be in college when we are 55, meaning we could take money tax free out of our IRA and help with college if we didn't think we needed it ourselves
Big if!
The problem with the 529 is that it cannot be used for anything other than college. Bottom line for us: our children can get loans and have a lifetime of work ahead of them.
You need to be 59 1/2, not 55, to withdraw money without penalty, unless you stop working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poor person here . We max out 401k and IRA , and have little in college savings other than what grandparents put in
Since we are older parents , our children will be in college when we are 55, meaning we could take money tax free out of our IRA and help with college if we didn't think we needed it ourselves
Big if!
The problem with the 529 is that it cannot be used for anything other than college. Bottom line for us: our children can get loans and have a lifetime of work ahead of them.
Kids in college at 55 is not older parents.
Anonymous wrote:Poor person here . We max out 401k and IRA , and have little in college savings other than what grandparents put in
Since we are older parents , our children will be in college when we are 55, meaning we could take money tax free out of our IRA and help with college if we didn't think we needed it ourselves
Big if!
The problem with the 529 is that it cannot be used for anything other than college. Bottom line for us: our children can get loans and have a lifetime of work ahead of them.
Anonymous wrote:Poor person here . We max out 401k and IRA , and have little in college savings other than what grandparents put in
Since we are older parents , our children will be in college when we are 55, meaning we could take money tax free out of our IRA and help with college if we didn't think we needed it ourselves
Big if!
The problem with the 529 is that it cannot be used for anything other than college. Bottom line for us: our children can get loans and have a lifetime of work ahead of them.
Anonymous wrote:I think you are right to be concerned that 529s may not be the best way to save for college. My understanding is that you should max out your retirement savings before you save anything for college, i.e. $18k per year in 401k and $5500 per year in Roth IRA (per parent). If you are able to do that each year, then you can essentially afford to pay most college expenses out of pocket without hurting your retirement too much (meaning you pay $18k + $5500 in college expenses while DC in school instead of saving for retirement. Also, Roth contributions can be withdrawn for educational expenses without penalty). If you still have money to save, then contribute to 529.