Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One thing is for sure, the schools definition of “need”’ is likely far from your family’s definition of need. My HHI is about $300k and our EFC is almost $80k so…. There ya go.
At $300K, you can afford to pay for college. If you choose to spend it on a more expensive house, cars, travel, dining out, etc. then why should someone else subsidize you when some of us make 1/3 what you are making and manage to save?
NP. BS. These top 50 schools are sticking families with $80k tabs because they CAN. They do not need to charge this much to break even. There's no "subsidizing".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is $180k, our expected family contribution was $80k. My child was NMSF, top grades, etc. he got merit aid at some great schools, but zero merit at any top 50. He did not get any financial aid anywhere other than the standard $5500 loan for completing FAFSA
Anonymous wrote:Schools are getting away with some very fuzzy wording, in may mind. Their idea of "demonstrated need" involves loans, definitely. Then they come away feeling good about themselves, but meanwhile they have saddled my child with loans she will have for year to come! I will say that the FAFSA calculator is pretty darn eye opening as to what they think we as parents are supposed to be able to contribute. I don't know how they think it's gonna happen, but for us with a combined income of just over 200K and another child in college, they expect us to contribute $30K per year for our rising college student. And they offered her $1K in work study and $5K in student loans. Total BS.
Anonymous wrote:250k income dual income household. 2 kids in college- $145k tuition. Full- pay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One thing is for sure, the schools definition of “need”’ is likely far from your family’s definition of need. My HHI is about $300k and our EFC is almost $80k so…. There ya go.
At $300K, you can afford to pay for college. If you choose to spend it on a more expensive house, cars, travel, dining out, etc. then why should someone else subsidize you when some of us make 1/3 what you are making and manage to save?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some schools that meet full need with no loans.
Our friends, a family of 4, have an HHI of 95K. They were offered loans and about 5K off of tuition. That's it. That was the "need aid" they got
Interesting. DYK if they have assets of which you may not be aware?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some schools that meet full need with no loans.
Our friends, a family of 4, have an HHI of 95K. They were offered loans and about 5K off of tuition. That's it. That was the "need aid" they got
Anonymous wrote:Schools are getting away with some very fuzzy wording, in may mind. Their idea of "demonstrated need" involves loans, definitely. Then they come away feeling good about themselves, but meanwhile they have saddled my child with loans she will have for year to come! I will say that the FAFSA calculator is pretty darn eye opening as to what they think we as parents are supposed to be able to contribute. I don't know how they think it's gonna happen, but for us with a combined income of just over 200K and another child in college, they expect us to contribute $30K per year for our rising college student. And they offered her $1K in work study and $5K in student loans. Total BS.
Anonymous wrote:Our HHI is $180k, our expected family contribution was $80k. My child was NMSF, top grades, etc. he got merit aid at some great schools, but zero merit at any top 50. He did not get any financial aid anywhere other than the standard $5500 loan for completing FAFSA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some schools that meet full need with no loans.
Our friends, a family of 4, have an HHI of 95K. They were offered loans and about 5K off of tuition. That's it. That was the "need aid" they got
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools are getting away with some very fuzzy wording, in may mind. Their idea of "demonstrated need" involves loans, definitely. Then they come away feeling good about themselves, but meanwhile they have saddled my child with loans she will have for year to come! I will say that the FAFSA calculator is pretty darn eye opening as to what they think we as parents are supposed to be able to contribute. I don't know how they think it's gonna happen, but for us with a combined income of just over 200K and another child in college, they expect us to contribute $30K per year for our rising college student. And they offered her $1K in work study and $5K in student loans. Total BS.
30k EFC for 200k income seems generous, PP with HHI 180k has 80k EFC!