Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again,
I went to a Harvard-type school and I can't imagine saving 150K for college. At 160K per year I had 10-20K in financial aid which would be much more today (after a congressional investigation). Anyway, I earned & applied for scholarships to help pay for college and all it did was replace the "need" award.
I know that 529 says it doesn't impact FAFSA (up to 5%) but the fine print is that each university gets to decide how to facto it in and the elite universities are tough to predict. I don't want to invest in the state tuition plan because no one in our family has attended state universities so it's likely my child will end up at a private school as well.
Our HHI is $180k and we have saved $250k for our two kids, ages 16 and 14, mostly in 529s. It can be done.
We max out retirement savings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the unhelpful post PP.
I estimated my salary because it changes every year. Merit aid is not offered at the private colleges I am familiar with (Harvard included). I said outside merit scholarships and it's true that they took away my need based award because I received outside scholarships. I also had college savings from my parents, but when your college bills topple 60K per year, there is no amount of savings to prevent the six-figure bill.
I never said I wouldn't save for college, I just am suspicious that a 529 is another way of deciding to take away financial aid. Thank you to the other posters re:Roth IRA. I'll go that route.
I don't understand why you think that you will get financial aid if your income remains between 100-200k.
Anonymous wrote:OP again,
I went to a Harvard-type school and I can't imagine saving 150K for college. At 160K per year I had 10-20K in financial aid which would be much more today (after a congressional investigation). Anyway, I earned & applied for scholarships to help pay for college and all it did was replace the "need" award.
I know that 529 says it doesn't impact FAFSA (up to 5%) but the fine print is that each university gets to decide how to facto it in and the elite universities are tough to predict. I don't want to invest in the state tuition plan because no one in our family has attended state universities so it's likely my child will end up at a private school as well.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the unhelpful post PP.
I estimated my salary because it changes every year. Merit aid is not offered at the private colleges I am familiar with (Harvard included). I said outside merit scholarships and it's true that they took away my need based award because I received outside scholarships. I also had college savings from my parents, but when your college bills topple 60K per year, there is no amount of savings to prevent the six-figure bill.
I never said I wouldn't save for college, I just am suspicious that a 529 is another way of deciding to take away financial aid. Thank you to the other posters re:Roth IRA. I'll go that route.
Anonymous wrote:OP again,
I went to a Harvard-type school and I can't imagine saving 150K for college. At 160K per year I had 10-20K in financial aid which would be much more today (after a congressional investigation). Anyway, I earned & applied for scholarships to help pay for college and all it did was replace the "need" award.
I know that 529 says it doesn't impact FAFSA (up to 5%) but the fine print is that each university gets to decide how to facto it in and the elite universities are tough to predict. I don't want to invest in the state tuition plan because no one in our family has attended state universities so it's likely my child will end up at a private school as well.
Anonymous wrote:OP again,
I went to a Harvard-type school and I can't imagine saving 150K for college. At 160K per year I had 10-20K in financial aid which would be much more today (after a congressional investigation). Anyway, I earned & applied for scholarships to help pay for college and all it did was replace the "need" award.
I know that 529 says it doesn't impact FAFSA (up to 5%) but the fine print is that each university gets to decide how to facto it in and the elite universities are tough to predict. I don't want to invest in the state tuition plan because no one in our family has attended state universities so it's likely my child will end up at a private school as well.
Anonymous wrote:Middle class = 100-200K per year (only in DC I know)
I had a horrible experience paying for college. My parents made about 160k per year when I went to college.
My experience was that I qualified for virtually no aid and when I did the university stripped the aid because I got outside scholarships. I'm 30 and still have 100K in loans.
Anyway, who here had a positive experience paying for college with a 529? How have you rationalized (with an accountant) the possible negative impacts of the account on financial aid vs tax savings?[/quote]
I'm not sure I understand the question - what is the alternative to the possible negative impacts of a 529? No college savings at all?
Anonymous wrote:We barely make the 100K income level. We were told by several friends in the financial field that it is better to save money in a ROTH IRA than a 529 plan. It grows tax free, you can take the base out anytime, it doesn't count against financial aid and if your kid doesn't go to college or gets scholarships etc., then you have the money for retirement. Even those who make over the limit for a ROTH IRA can contribute to a regular IRA and convert it. Between two people, that's at least $11K a year going into the account (more if your over age 50). I think its just a little more flexible than the 529 plans.