Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We only have one and have $210K saved so far. She is starting her SR year in college. I am figuring max $70k a year for tuition, room & board. My DH keeps talking about spending $ and I am like WHAT?!?
She is lucky we are giving her this ...
What school? $70k/year seems like an example on the high end.
Anonymous wrote:We only have one and have $210K saved so far. She is starting her SR year in college. I am figuring max $70k a year for tuition, room & board. My DH keeps talking about spending $ and I am like WHAT?!?
She is lucky we are giving her this ...
Anonymous wrote:We only have one and have $210K saved so far. She is starting her SR year in college. I am figuring max $70k a year for tuition, room & board. My DH keeps talking about spending $ and I am like WHAT?!?
She is lucky we are giving her this ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We only have one and have $210K saved so far. She is starting her SR year in college. I am figuring max $70k a year for tuition, room & board. My DH keeps talking about spending $ and I am like WHAT?!?
She is lucky we are giving her this ...
She can earn her own spending money.
How are you going to cover the rest.
I think OP is frying his/her brain worrying too much. That kind of savings is a lot of money. Any shortfall, deal with it when it comes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We only have one and have $210K saved so far. She is starting her SR year in college. I am figuring max $70k a year for tuition, room & board. My DH keeps talking about spending $ and I am like WHAT?!?
She is lucky we are giving her this ...
She can earn her own spending money.
How are you going to cover the rest.
Anonymous wrote:We only have one and have $210K saved so far. She is starting her SR year in college. I am figuring max $70k a year for tuition, room & board. My DH keeps talking about spending $ and I am like WHAT?!?
She is lucky we are giving her this ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The more you save, the less (potential) aid.
PP here. That wasn't meant to be snarky. That's was a piece of advice I heard from a NE SLAC financial aid director when she was touring our HS.
Anonymous wrote:The more you save, the less (potential) aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only child entering high school. Realistically how much do we need to have saved for college? We currently have enough for four years of tuition at any in-state (VA) public school.
Seems reasonable. What is this number?
We prepaid 4 years of tuition through VAs prepaid college program
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:are you willing to impose the rule "you have to stay in state or come up with the money?""?
R&B - can you afford that out of pocket?
OP here. We want to have enough saved to fund tuition, room & board, books and car insurance. Kid will have to work and pay for incidentals and spending money. We are looking at retiring before kid finishes college, so we are trying to prepare. We have a good chunk of money saved now, but want to be prepared. We can give DS enough for public in-state school OR the majority of out of state/private school. But if he wants school that is significantly more, he will have to help fund it. At some point in the next couple of years we want to stop saving for college and save more toward retirement.
always retirement first.
We have been saving for retirement for years. We just want to stop saving for college at some point and put that money into retirement. I'm basically looking for a number at which we have "enough" saved for college.