Anonymous wrote:Running the school calculators, based on our current income (260K), our child will not get any money until his brother enters college in 2 years. We have only made this income for 18 months, prior to that, (although 2 full time incomes, one was quite low because of family obligations) we were in the mid 100s Can we get this accounted for at all? Son is a jr with pretty perfect stats (but no real hook, just a well-rounded smart kids, like a lot of others).
I know how this post will come across to some people, but it seems to me like the expectation that we could have saved 70K for each year of school is based on the fact that we have made this for a significant amount of time, and I'm wondering if there is a way to counteract that. We are in our early 40s.
Anonymous wrote:Really, a $3500 mortgage?? Isn’t that called being “house poor?”
Anonymous wrote:This is how schools look at your ability to pay tuition: Past earnings (your savings) + current earnings + future earnings (loans). No one expects you to fund college solely out of current income. If your savings is lacking, then you need to find a cheaper school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why in the world would you expect to get financial aid when you make $260,000 a year???
Most people don't have an extra $6,000/mo that they don't already have going towards something else. Being expected to come up with that kind of money is daunting.
Most people don’t need to pay $70,000 a year for a kid to go to college either. There are plenty of less expensive options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why in the world would you expect to get financial aid when you make $260,000 a year???
Most people don't have an extra $6,000/mo that they don't already have going towards something else. Being expected to come up with that kind of money is daunting.
Right, but she said their annual income jumped ~$100K in the last 18 months. So unless they went out and spent a LOT of money on new things ($$$ cars they didn't pay cash for, a new larger home w/a new larger mortgage) it shouldn't hurt that much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. What is involved in appealing an aid offer. When would one do that and how?
My parents did this when I was in college by contacting the financial aid office after I received the offer. It was a pretty unusual situation, but one parent had lost a job a few months before (so big income drop not reflected in the prior year's taxes) and I think the school had also counted a trust for a disabled sibling's long term care as a parental asset. My parents showed documentation for that and the school took it out of the picture of assets to be drawn down.
Not sure our example helps OP whatsoever, but the point was it was a highly individualized and relatively informal process.
Anonymous wrote:NP. What is involved in appealing an aid offer. When would one do that and how?
Anonymous wrote:NP. What is involved in appealing an aid offer. When would one do that and how?