Anonymous wrote:Yeah, no. You see, there’s something called the CSS that delves deeply into your finances. Sometimes you’re even asked what cars are in your garage.
Don’t count on aid for your kid even if you’re just a couple years from retirement. Oh, and you’ll be expected to drain your other kid’s 529 account too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Loans
No 18+ can get such big loans. It has to be parent plus loan.
Anonymous wrote:It's absolutely shameful how much a college education costs in this country. And the system pits individuals against each other. People wasting their energies blaming and shaming their peers for not saving enough. Let's direct that energy up the chain and expose the collusion between the schools and the government loan system that perpetuates this insanity.
It's also abhorrent how there is not a viable vocational alternative. Another track that is seen as equally worthy of pursuing.
To answer your question, I don't know how most families pay for a college education other than going into debt to some degree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are parents with a good HHI who are either bad with money or who choose not to save for college. That money goes to living above their means. It drastically limits college options.
Bad with money?? You have never heard of uncovered, out-of-pocket medical expenses? You know nothing of special needs? Expensive prescriptions? Psychiatrists and psychologists who do not take insurance? Ever heard of disability? We have millions in our retirement accounts because it was made easy to save with pre-tax deductions and 401Ks, but our college funds are next to nothing because of medical expenses.
Anonymous wrote:There are parents with a good HHI who are either bad with money or who choose not to save for college. That money goes to living above their means. It drastically limits college options.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, no. You see, there’s something called the CSS that delves deeply into your finances. Sometimes you’re even asked what cars are in your garage.
Don’t count on aid for your kid even if you’re just a couple years from retirement. Oh, and you’ll be expected to drain your other kid’s 529 account too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that most people on DCUM have $80k saved per year of college and much of America (HHI under $125k) gets aid but do these two realities really cover these gigantic pools of applicants to all the top 50 schools? has the rest of America also saved $80k/year/kid? am I missing something? thinking about this tonight as friends of ours just had their daughter (one of 6 kids, first in college) commit to Carnegie Mellon. I know for a fact that they make more than $150k but I had no idea that $&0k/year was in their budget.
Responsible parents save for their kids' education.
Anonymous wrote:This is our situation. I opened 529s the week of birth. We saved. Grandparents helped.
We drive old cars. Live in old house. We still do not have 80k/year saved.
+1 If you have multiple kids and income of $150k/year, it's really hard to get anywhere close to $80k per year no matter when you start saving. We started saving for each of our 3 kids before they were born and also increased contributions after the high day care costs ended.
It's really astonishing that colleges as rich as some of these private schools (which have been called "hedge funds with a university on the side" for a reason) charge so much and only give like 50-60% of the kids any kind of financial help. At these prices, it should be like 90% of the kids getting at least some assistance.
Sorry to vent but I get frustrated when people act like these extraordinary costs are on the same level as 20-30 years ago and it's no big deal. You can save forever but once your kid is college-age, you find that the assets count against you and any little crumbs of financial aid disappear once you add your 529 savings into the net price calculator.
The options are limited when schools like UMD get 55k applications. Thank goodness for other in-state options and merit aid at some colleges, but it'd be better for the economy and for America in general if cost wasn't the first thing most families consider when evaluating colleges.
I really think there ought to be an organized push from families and employers to make all colleges (including the uber-expensive private ones) more reasonably priced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most high stats kids from donuts hole families give up on elite schools and go to the in state flagship
This is us. Our HHI is $145K. We didn't qualify for much FA, despite the fact that $80K per year is more than half our HHI!! Crazy.
State schools for our kids.
Meaning, the best and the brightest are NOT going to the Ivies or the SLACs like Amherst, Williams, Swarthmore, etc.
My kids should be at these schools, but we can't afford to send them there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that most people on DCUM have $80k saved per year of college and much of America (HHI under $125k) gets aid but do these two realities really cover these gigantic pools of applicants to all the top 50 schools? has the rest of America also saved $80k/year/kid? am I missing something? thinking about this tonight as friends of ours just had their daughter (one of 6 kids, first in college) commit to Carnegie Mellon. I know for a fact that they make more than $150k but I had no idea that $&0k/year was in their budget.
Responsible parents save for their kids' education.
STFU.
Gawd these self-righteous posters are sick.
We saved for our children's education!