Anonymous wrote:That seems awfully high. The most expensive colleges we’ve seen are $70K a year so $280 for four years currently. Even 15 years out that seems high.
Anonymous wrote:WHY ARE WE accepting this?????
It’s complete bullshit. Next on agenda: college reform. It’s absolutely immoral.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, lock in tuition now, save aggressively and compound that interest
I understand why that would make sense from the last 20 years or so of history, but personally I feel like there's enough possibility of a disruption to expenses that I've decided to go the savings account instead.
Anonymous wrote:Yup, lock in tuition now, save aggressively and compound that interest
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did the prepaid for our site college. Then are saving for room and board and graduate school in a 529. We will not even consider privates.
So with the prepaid option, what happens if your kid doesn't want to go there or doesn't get in? Do you lose the money?
Anonymous wrote:She's 3. I used the Vanguard calculator and it came out with the following projected tuition costs:
Public in state: $196,681
Public out of state: $343,454
Less expensive private: $446,837
More expensive private (so the ones that now cost around $60K/year): $539,392
We make a good living and have one kid, but how the hell are we supposed to be able to afford these tuition costs?! To get to the public in-state option, and assuming no appreciation from investment options, we'd have to put away roughly $1100/month starting now. Well, we pay for preschool and have a mortgage, so that isn't happening at all easily. Saving for the most expensive private universities would require putting away $3000/month starting now.
Someone tell me how the hell people do this.
Anonymous wrote:We did the prepaid for our site college. Then are saving for room and board and graduate school in a 529. We will not even consider privates.
Anonymous wrote:She's 3. I used the Vanguard calculator and it came out with the following projected tuition costs:
Public in state: $196,681
Public out of state: $343,454
Less expensive private: $446,837
More expensive private (so the ones that now cost around $60K/year): $539,392
We make a good living and have one kid, but how the hell are we supposed to be able to afford these tuition costs?! To get to the public in-state option, and assuming no appreciation from investment options, we'd have to put away roughly $1100/month starting now. Well, we pay for preschool and have a mortgage, so that isn't happening at all easily. Saving for the most expensive private universities would require putting away $3000/month starting now.
Someone tell me how the hell people do this.