Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:39     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.


Did you run the Cornell NPC? Because it literally does.


Yes, twice and it literally doesn’t.


Zip code: 22207
Two siblings, 14 y/o
AGI: $176,000 (accounts for maxing out 403b plans)
Federal tax payment: $21,500
Interest and dividend income: 0
Business losses: 0
Educational tax credits: 0
Untaxed income, benefits, and retirement plan contributions: $49,000 403b contribution + $11,000 pension contribution = $60,000
No child support
Cash savings: $25,000
Current home value: $1 million
Home purchase price: $400,000
Owe on house: $225,000
Current home equity: $775,000
Year of home purchase: 2007
Current investments (includes applicant’s 529): $65,000
Sibling assets: $130,000 (529s)
Private school tuition: $0
No student income or assets

Estimated net price: $67,820
No business/farm/other real estate


Ohhh I see, the missing part is that the parents are saving for a multimillion retirement that can’t be reduced for any time and OP apparently confused the numbers 68 and 75. Got it.


It makes zero difference for financial aid purposes if the family has an AGI of $225,000 and contributing nothing to retirement or has an AGI of $176,000 because they’re maxing out their retirement contributions. The untaxed contributions are added back and treated as available income. So everything is still the same EFC wise either way. Don’t worry, families are not “rewarded” for saving for retirement.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:36     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.


Did you run the Cornell NPC? Because it literally does.


Yes, twice and it literally doesn’t.


Zip code: 22207
Two siblings, 14 y/o
AGI: $176,000 (accounts for maxing out 403b plans)
Federal tax payment: $21,500
Interest and dividend income: 0
Business losses: 0
Educational tax credits: 0
Untaxed income, benefits, and retirement plan contributions: $49,000 403b contribution + $11,000 pension contribution = $60,000
No child support
Cash savings: $25,000
Current home value: $1 million
Home purchase price: $400,000
Owe on house: $225,000
Current home equity: $775,000
Year of home purchase: 2007
Current investments (includes applicant’s 529): $65,000
Sibling assets: $130,000 (529s)
Private school tuition: $0
No student income or assets

Estimated net price: $67,820
No business/farm/other real estate


Ohhh I see, the missing part is that the parents are saving for a multimillion retirement that can’t be reduced for any time and OP apparently confused the numbers 68 and 75. Got it.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:36     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.


Did you run the Cornell NPC? Because it literally does.


Yes, twice and it literally doesn’t.


Zip code: 22207
Two siblings, 14 y/o
AGI: $176,000 (accounts for maxing out 403b plans)
Federal tax payment: $21,500
Interest and dividend income: 0
Business losses: 0
Educational tax credits: 0
Untaxed income, benefits, and retirement plan contributions: $49,000 403b contribution + $11,000 pension contribution = $60,000
No child support
Cash savings: $25,000
Current home value: $1 million
Home purchase price: $400,000
Owe on house: $225,000
Current home equity: $775,000
Year of home purchase: 2007
Current investments (includes applicant’s 529): $65,000
Sibling assets: $130,000 (529s)
Private school tuition: $0
No student income or assets

Estimated net price: $67,820
No business/farm/other real estate


If you’re making retirement contributions, schools rightly expect you to stop that and redirect the cash to college. You can’t tell the college that your budget is tight while you defer 25% of your income to retirement savings. No donor would appreciate their funds being used that way.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:32     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:Honestly, parents should consider this before allowing their kid to even apply to the dream school. And let them know they are only going to the OOS flagship if they get sufficient merit. Once at the OOS flagship, they know they need to do well to get into grad school. Great motivator to do well.


OOS costs similar to private school. Merit aid is even harder to get. That's why most people have to choose their state college. But not all states are lucky to have good state colleges.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:25     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


OP, what posters are reacting negatively to is not that your sister won’t sell her house, but that there must be more to the story. I and other families have been through this process with selective, needs blind schools, and a family making $200k with little or no assets outside of retirement accounts and home equity are not asked to pay full freight. Period. That means there must be a ton of home equity - like $1 million+ — non-retirement savings, 529 plans, etc. Why don’t you share the whole story? Or, maybe your sister is withholding important facts from you. Tell her you ran the NPC calculator and their story doesn’t add up.


They weren’t asked to pay full freight. They got modest aid. Not enough. It’s plausible that a family in a HCOL area bought a modest, 400k cape cod in 2000 and it’s now worth a million.

If for Cornell, you put in the net price calculator 750k in home equity, 160k across all three kids’ 529s (which is akin to having invested less than $250 per month for 18 years) with no other investments, and 225k in household income, you’ll get almost exactly the EFC that OP described.


If you’re saying $160k per kid then you can probably find a way to swing $75k per year for the first.

If you’re saying $160k total I ran that exact scenario you described and the cost was only $47k, which is almost $30k off from what OP described.


And I will add that if you’re saying there is ~$480k total in college savings across all three kids then you are making our point for us, which is that there was key information not included in the original post.


160k across three kids. I.e. ~53k/kid in total 529 savings.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:24     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.


Did you run the Cornell NPC? Because it literally does.


Yes, twice and it literally doesn’t.


Zip code: 22207
Two siblings, 14 y/o
AGI: $176,000 (accounts for maxing out 403b plans)
Federal tax payment: $21,500
Interest and dividend income: 0
Business losses: 0
Educational tax credits: 0
Untaxed income, benefits, and retirement plan contributions: $49,000 403b contribution + $11,000 pension contribution = $60,000
No child support
Cash savings: $25,000
Current home value: $1 million
Home purchase price: $400,000
Owe on house: $225,000
Current home equity: $775,000
Year of home purchase: 2007
Current investments (includes applicant’s 529): $65,000
Sibling assets: $130,000 (529s)
Private school tuition: $0
No student income or assets
No business/farm/other real estate

Estimated net price: $67,820


Yeah, this sounds right and is pretty roughly in line with OP. Sounds like people are forgetting to add in pension contributions and 65k/kid in 529. Or they’re just lying.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:22     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.


Did you run the Cornell NPC? Because it literally does.


Yes, twice and it literally doesn’t.


Zip code: 22207
Two siblings, 14 y/o
AGI: $176,000 (accounts for maxing out 403b plans)
Federal tax payment: $21,500
Interest and dividend income: 0
Business losses: 0
Educational tax credits: 0
Untaxed income, benefits, and retirement plan contributions: $49,000 403b contribution + $11,000 pension contribution = $60,000
No child support
Cash savings: $25,000
Current home value: $1 million
Home purchase price: $400,000
Owe on house: $225,000
Current home equity: $775,000
Year of home purchase: 2007
Current investments (includes applicant’s 529): $65,000
Sibling assets: $130,000 (529s)
Private school tuition: $0
No student income or assets

Estimated net price: $67,820
No business/farm/other real estate
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:20     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

If there is 529 money, private schools that use the CSS profile (practically all of them) count money across all accounts, as parents can move money between accounts. For example, if you have 3 kids and 3 529 accounts with 100k in each, if only one kid is in school, 5.64% of the entire $300k is counted toward the family’s annual contribution.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:09     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


OP, what posters are reacting negatively to is not that your sister won’t sell her house, but that there must be more to the story. I and other families have been through this process with selective, needs blind schools, and a family making $200k with little or no assets outside of retirement accounts and home equity are not asked to pay full freight. Period. That means there must be a ton of home equity - like $1 million+ — non-retirement savings, 529 plans, etc. Why don’t you share the whole story? Or, maybe your sister is withholding important facts from you. Tell her you ran the NPC calculator and their story doesn’t add up.


They weren’t asked to pay full freight. They got modest aid. Not enough. It’s plausible that a family in a HCOL area bought a modest, 400k cape cod in 2000 and it’s now worth a million.

If for Cornell, you put in the net price calculator 750k in home equity, 160k across all three kids’ 529s (which is akin to having invested less than $250 per month for 18 years) with no other investments, and 225k in household income, you’ll get almost exactly the EFC that OP described.


If you’re saying $160k per kid then you can probably find a way to swing $75k per year for the first.

If you’re saying $160k total I ran that exact scenario you described and the cost was only $47k, which is almost $30k off from what OP described.


And I will add that if you’re saying there is ~$480k total in college savings across all three kids then you are making our point for us, which is that there was key information not included in the original post.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:03     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.


Did you run the Cornell NPC? Because it literally does.


Yes, twice and it literally doesn’t.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 12:03     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


OP, what posters are reacting negatively to is not that your sister won’t sell her house, but that there must be more to the story. I and other families have been through this process with selective, needs blind schools, and a family making $200k with little or no assets outside of retirement accounts and home equity are not asked to pay full freight. Period. That means there must be a ton of home equity - like $1 million+ — non-retirement savings, 529 plans, etc. Why don’t you share the whole story? Or, maybe your sister is withholding important facts from you. Tell her you ran the NPC calculator and their story doesn’t add up.


They weren’t asked to pay full freight. They got modest aid. Not enough. It’s plausible that a family in a HCOL area bought a modest, 400k cape cod in 2000 and it’s now worth a million.

If for Cornell, you put in the net price calculator 750k in home equity, 160k across all three kids’ 529s (which is akin to having invested less than $250 per month for 18 years) with no other investments, and 225k in household income, you’ll get almost exactly the EFC that OP described.


If you’re saying $160k per kid then you can probably find a way to swing $75k per year for the first.

If you’re saying $160k total I ran that exact scenario you described and the cost was only $47k, which is almost $30k off from what OP described.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 11:58     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.


Did you run the Cornell NPC? Because it literally does.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 11:57     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


OP, what posters are reacting negatively to is not that your sister won’t sell her house, but that there must be more to the story. I and other families have been through this process with selective, needs blind schools, and a family making $200k with little or no assets outside of retirement accounts and home equity are not asked to pay full freight. Period. That means there must be a ton of home equity - like $1 million+ — non-retirement savings, 529 plans, etc. Why don’t you share the whole story? Or, maybe your sister is withholding important facts from you. Tell her you ran the NPC calculator and their story doesn’t add up.


I'm not OP. But I don't think it is important. If you live in DMV where the public high schools score 9 or 10, the houses are more than 1m. As long as you have paid about half, you have no chance for financial aid. This is just so cruel.


Home equity is capped at a share of income, so many people in this situation still get aid.

It entirely depends on the school? Each school has its own secret formula. Some schools have no cap at all.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 11:55     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


OP, what posters are reacting negatively to is not that your sister won’t sell her house, but that there must be more to the story. I and other families have been through this process with selective, needs blind schools, and a family making $200k with little or no assets outside of retirement accounts and home equity are not asked to pay full freight. Period. That means there must be a ton of home equity - like $1 million+ — non-retirement savings, 529 plans, etc. Why don’t you share the whole story? Or, maybe your sister is withholding important facts from you. Tell her you ran the NPC calculator and their story doesn’t add up.


I'm not OP. But I don't think it is important. If you live in DMV where the public high schools score 9 or 10, the houses are more than 1m. As long as you have paid about half, you have no chance for financial aid. This is just so cruel.


Home equity is capped at a share of income, so many people in this situation still get aid.
Anonymous
Post 03/29/2026 11:52     Subject: When the reality of college cost hits. Cannot do dream school.

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't believe you


This is an odd post.


Under the circumstances OP has described, I don't believe an Ivy would require the parents to pay 75k. I just don't.


I’m actually with this person. All of the Ivies either exclude home equity or cap it at a low multiple of income when considering how much the parents have in assets. Most (all?) also take into account medical expenses not covered by insurance.

I ran the Columbia (who I think uses the highest multiple of income for home equity) NPC calculator quickly with the limited info OP provided and some generous assumptions and it only had a family contribution of $19k, with Columbia picking up $78k. There are some major assets missing from this story.


I ran it again with even more generous (and probably unrealistic) assumptions and it spit out a family contribution of $29k with Columbia covering $68k. Something is missing here.


Did op kid get into ivy or columbia? Why are you mentioning Columbia?


Because, as stated before, Columbia is the harshest Ivy with regard to home equity. So if home equity is truly the problem, Columbia should spit out the least favorable number. Everywhere else would be better for a high home equity case. And yet the expected contribution from Columbia is still quite low.

Hence, there are missing assets from this story.


harshest how? yale doesn't exclude any real estate, even primary.


Yale is more opaque about how they calculate EFC. In any event, I ran the Yale NPC with $1.2 million in home equity and a handful of other assets and it still spit out a family contribution of $31k, with Yale covering $60k. Still something missing.


on what income? I asked Yale about this and it's 1x income. also what did you put in as a "handful" of other assets. like what about the 529s for 3 kids.


See, I believe Columbia is 2x income which I why I used that originally.

Assumptions for Yale were $200k income, $5k in interest/dividend income, $70k in checking/savings, $50k in investments, $50k additional in sibling assets, $5k in income and assets each for the student. $1.2 million in home equity as previously indicated. Seem like fairly generous assumptions.

Did the same for Cornell and it spit out $42k in contribution with the school covering $51k. Getting closer but still not that close.


Agree there are large missing assets to this story. Or. OP is a troll.


I stated explicitly in my original post that my sister has a good deal of home equity but it's not about to sell her long time home to send her child to college. I think we can all agree that the middle class gets screwed in this process. Several other teachers have commented here in similar situations. You make too much for meaningful aid but not nearly enough that you can afford such a huge sticker price. And people should not have to sell their houses to send their kids to college. Which my sister is not going to do. My niece will probably end up at her state flagship and be fine. But that doesn't mean that it doesn't stink to have to tell your child that you cannot afford their dream college after they work their butt off for years and years. Can't we all agree on that?


I think most people can agree with that. But the point of some of these comments is that the numbers don’t make sense based purely on what you described. $200k income and high home equity with sizable medical expenses mixed in (which are generally considered) doesn’t get you a $75k bill. So the point people are making is that there are some other assets somewhere. Whether these are easily usable for college is unknown but there is some part of the picture that is missing.