Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is paying from "cash flow"?
That you are able to pay from your day-to-day income, not drawing from savings.
I am a divorced parent who was overwhelmed by the cost of tuition and fees. I couldn't imagine the idea of paying $80,000. Saved very little because the divorce court knew my disposable income better than I did. Luckily, this was reflected in the FAFSA and CSS. I was able to pay for an ivy league degree on cash flow.
If you could pay of ran Ivy out of cash flow, why weren't you saving?
Anonymous wrote:DC goes to college in 2026. How much does it cost for an OOS Top 50 school/yr ?( we will not qualify for aid)
I was budgeting $50K ( so $200K for 4 years) - but some schools have tuition alone at $50k ( eg UCLA is $46k) per year
So total cost seems to be close to $70k to $80k, which equates to $300k-$350k for 4 years.
Is that what others have experienced?
Anonymous wrote:DC goes to college in 2026. How much does it cost for an OOS Top 50 school/yr ?( we will not qualify for aid)
I was budgeting $50K ( so $200K for 4 years) - but some schools have tuition alone at $50k ( eg UCLA is $46k) per year
So total cost seems to be close to $70k to $80k, which equates to $300k-$350k for 4 years.
Is that what others have experienced?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is paying from "cash flow"?
That you are able to pay from your day-to-day income, not drawing from savings.
I am a divorced parent who was overwhelmed by the cost of tuition and fees. I couldn't imagine the idea of paying $80,000. Saved very little because the divorce court knew my disposable income better than I did. Luckily, this was reflected in the FAFSA and CSS. I was able to pay for an ivy league degree on cash flow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is paying from "cash flow"?
That you are able to pay from your day-to-day income, not drawing from savings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have “well-funded” 529s started when they were babies. But not sure that we even have enough in the eldest’s for next year! He’s a junior. The costs are outrageous. But I admit we haven’t considered u of Maryland. I’m old ( went to college in the 70s) and a snob. Go ahead flame me
You're not alone, but consider that this year, UMD's admit rate is 34%.
There were many surprises this year with UMD admissions. It is nobody's safety school!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have “well-funded” 529s started when they were babies. But not sure that we even have enough in the eldest’s for next year! He’s a junior. The costs are outrageous. But I admit we haven’t considered u of Maryland. I’m old ( went to college in the 70s) and a snob. Go ahead flame me
You're not alone, but consider that this year, UMD's admit rate is 34%.