Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Can you point me to where you see this? I think you may be talking about the fund expense ratio. If you look at other "states" their funds have expenses too. Are DC's more than others? I'm not sure, but it looks similar. I have some IL 529 and they have a few dollar like admin fee I think regardless of the funds used.
No, it’s an account maintenance fee. $10/account for residents and $15/account for non-residents, pain annually.
https://www.dccollegesavings.com/home/faqs.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be dumb to say this because everyone on this thread is informed - but congratulations OP for making a way to save for your child's college education.
I recently spent some time in the financial aid office at a top college and witnessed a parent crying in the corner. Her child, who was admitted to the school was consoling her. Even with generous FA they couldn't make it work. One of the most heartbreaking things I ever saw.
That was one of the most heartbreaking things you've ever seen? Really? That's great!
At least they realized before DC started, not a few years and a few hundred thousand dollars later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It may be dumb to say this because everyone on this thread is informed - but congratulations OP for making a way to save for your child's college education.
I recently spent some time in the financial aid office at a top college and witnessed a parent crying in the corner. Her child, who was admitted to the school was consoling her. Even with generous FA they couldn't make it work. One of the most heartbreaking things I ever saw.
That was one of the most heartbreaking things you've ever seen? Really? That's great!
At least they realized before DC started, not a few years and a few hundred thousand dollars later.
Anonymous wrote:It may be dumb to say this because everyone on this thread is informed - but congratulations OP for making a way to save for your child's college education.
I recently spent some time in the financial aid office at a top college and witnessed a parent crying in the corner. Her child, who was admitted to the school was consoling her. Even with generous FA they couldn't make it work. One of the most heartbreaking things I ever saw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC plan is horrible because of the high fees. My spouse believes it's still a good deal for the DC tax breaks given to DC residents, but I am not persuaded.
DC's plan USED to be horrible (Calvert Investments was manager) but you could get the tax break and then transfer funds elsewhere after a year. However, DC changed fund managers a year or so ago and I think it's better now, but have not done research to see how much better now.
Yes, but DC residents still have to pay annual maintenance fees. It’s ridiculous.
Can you point me to where you see this? I think you may be talking about the fund expense ratio. If you look at other "states" their funds have expenses too. Are DC's more than others? I'm not sure, but it looks similar. I have some IL 529 and they have a few dollar like admin fee I think regardless of the funds used.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC plan is horrible because of the high fees. My spouse believes it's still a good deal for the DC tax breaks given to DC residents, but I am not persuaded.
DC's plan USED to be horrible (Calvert Investments was manager) but you could get the tax break and then transfer funds elsewhere after a year. However, DC changed fund managers a year or so ago and I think it's better now, but have not done research to see how much better now.
Yes, but DC residents still have to pay annual maintenance fees. It’s ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher return means higher loss when market turns south.
That is not how this works!
Exactly. Which is why we did a basic VA prepaid for 4 years for both of our kids and they share a large invest account.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Higher return means higher loss when market turns south.
That is not how this works!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just logged on to the VA529 website, filled out the information, dropped money in and we were done.
We could have set it up through our financial advisor but didn't want to pay the middleman fees. VA529 has an age based portfolio so we just chose that one and it's done well.
Same and I'm in VA. I put the max that's deductible on state taxes (4k) in a year into the age based portfolio.
I couldn't open the 529 until I had a social security number for the baby.
mjsmith wrote:you don't need to open one with any one particular state or locality
you can speak with any financial person and start a 529 with any company. ameritrade, fidelity, vangaurd, tia cref, ect...
yes there are some tax benefits with using your states 529 plan. but it may not be as aggressive as private plans..