Anonymous wrote:It's never a no-brainer.
Find the right school for the child at the time. It's great that you have the money to have options - but explore ALL your options, including public.
As a dear friend said about considering schools:
"take it one kid at a time, one year at a time"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We've recently experienced a significant increase in our annual income.
We have 3 kids who are attending a great private preschool. We have mixed feelings about going all 12 years at a private vs starting at a JKLM school and moving to private for middle school.
We come from middle class backgrounds so do not have generational wealth or help from the grandparents.
We can afford private for all 3 now but don't want to find ourselves in "golden handcuffs" where we don't have room to leave a job or take a pay cut. (For context, right now our joint income is $1.5M per year but a few years ago it was at $370K per year when we both took pay cuts to follow jobs we were passionate about.)
With no debt and a relatively low mortgage ($3K per month), what income would you feel you need to bring in to go all in on private from preschool on while also saving and living comfortably?
It has nothing to do with income.
Private does not mean better.
This post is stupid.
Anonymous wrote:We've recently experienced a significant increase in our annual income.
We have 3 kids who are attending a great private preschool. We have mixed feelings about going all 12 years at a private vs starting at a JKLM school and moving to private for middle school.
We come from middle class backgrounds so do not have generational wealth or help from the grandparents.
We can afford private for all 3 now but don't want to find ourselves in "golden handcuffs" where we don't have room to leave a job or take a pay cut. (For context, right now our joint income is $1.5M per year but a few years ago it was at $370K per year when we both took pay cuts to follow jobs we were passionate about.)
With no debt and a relatively low mortgage ($3K per month), what income would you feel you need to bring in to go all in on private from preschool on while also saving and living comfortably?
As someone who’s done both l agree with this. In your shoes l would give public a chance.Anonymous wrote:It's never a no-brainer. Private schools have down sides -- and public schools have advantages -- beyond financial. What do your kids need?
Anonymous wrote:It's never a no-brainer.
Find the right school for the child at the time. It's great that you have the money to have options - but explore ALL your options, including public.
As a dear friend said about considering schools:
"take it one kid at a time, one year at a time"
Anonymous wrote:It's never a no-brainer.
Find the right school for the child at the time. It's great that you have the money to have options - but explore ALL your options, including public.
As a dear friend said about considering schools:
"take it one kid at a time, one year at a time"
Anonymous wrote:It's never a no-brainer. Private schools have down sides -- and public schools have advantages -- beyond financial. What do your kids need?
Anonymous wrote:1.5mm HHI is like 800k after taxes? So you are going to pay 3x50 = 150k or about a fifth of your take-home pay for private school tuition. For me, this would be worth it for smaller class sizes, though I do not think the education at the elementary level is better than a good public. If you wait until 4th for private you will save 4x150k, what would you rather do with 550k in cash that can also benefit your child?