Anonymous wrote:I'm an attorney and among other things, lying about residency for the purposes of getting in state tuition is actually illegal in most states, including Virginia. You can be charged with theft for the amount of the difference in tuition plus penalties and fees- as a well as a conviction on your record. This is not only theoretical there is actual case law of this happening.
I sympathize, especially since I pay OOS tuition myself, but this is not something I would recommend attempting. The PP got very, very lucky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD can establish VA residency on her own. She needs to change her permanent address to where she lives.
Then wouldn’t every OOS student do that and IS tuition?
Anonymous wrote:That will be a very expensive move. UVA OOS tuition is astronomical. The bottom line is, there is no way you can move and get in-state tuition. Many have tried, they are well aware of all the tricks and I have never once heard of anyone pulling it off- in any state- and I work in higher ed.
Anonymous wrote:A ha - OP, do you work in VA? If you do and pay VA income tax, then you might be able to swing it. But obviously, talk to a good accountant who knows SALT stuff well.
https://law.justia.com/codes/virginia/2014/title-23/section-23-7.4-2
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She could establish residency herself but you would no longer be able to claim her on taxes, car insurance, health insurance, etc
It requires more than that. The student would have to prove (a) that she is self-supporting, and (b) that she is not primarily living in VA to go to school. What would that look like? Working 40 hrs a week at a job that pays wnough to cover rent/food/transportation, and only going to school parttime.
Self-supporting could also be existence of a 529 or UGMA account. I got in-state tuition at 21 in Fla after living there for a year, based on the assets in my UGMA account because my part-time serving job certainly wasn’t paying the bills alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She could establish residency herself but you would no longer be able to claim her on taxes, car insurance, health insurance, etc
It requires more than that. The student would have to prove (a) that she is self-supporting, and (b) that she is not primarily living in VA to go to school. What would that look like? Working 40 hrs a week at a job that pays wnough to cover rent/food/transportation, and only going to school parttime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That will be a very expensive move. UVA OOS tuition is astronomical. The bottom line is, there is no way you can move and get in-state tuition. Many have tried, they are well aware of all the tricks and I have never once heard of anyone pulling it off- in any state- and I work in higher ed.
I’m the PP who moved out of state after 20 years and it did work for me, but probably because we never told the school that we moved.
If you never change your address, how do they know? Do they check every year?
We have a tuition waiver for Virginia and they absolutely check it every year and scrutinize it. But the triggering thing was my OOS address.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That will be a very expensive move. UVA OOS tuition is astronomical. The bottom line is, there is no way you can move and get in-state tuition. Many have tried, they are well aware of all the tricks and I have never once heard of anyone pulling it off- in any state- and I work in higher ed.
I’m the PP who moved out of state after 20 years and it did work for me, but probably because we never told the school that we moved.
If you never change your address, how do they know? Do they check every year?
We have a tuition waiver for Virginia and they absolutely check it every year and scrutinize it. But the triggering thing was my OOS address.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That will be a very expensive move. UVA OOS tuition is astronomical. The bottom line is, there is no way you can move and get in-state tuition. Many have tried, they are well aware of all the tricks and I have never once heard of anyone pulling it off- in any state- and I work in higher ed.
I’m the PP who moved out of state after 20 years and it did work for me, but probably because we never told the school that we moved.
Anonymous wrote:That will be a very expensive move. UVA OOS tuition is astronomical. The bottom line is, there is no way you can move and get in-state tuition. Many have tried, they are well aware of all the tricks and I have never once heard of anyone pulling it off- in any state- and I work in higher ed.