Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I showed my kids how taking out the subsidized loans helped their credit. They did so. I'll pay them off three months after graduation. When they'll have credit at 720plus.
They've also had Roths since they were babysitting at 13/14 years old.
I'm big about financial literacy
That's a lot to pay for credit. I'd rather my kids just build their own with responsible use of credit cards - free way to build credit.
It’s an interest-free loan. It costs nothing. In fact I get to invest that cash instead of spending. Clock doesn’t start on govt loans til graduation.
Anonymous wrote:This is a 5%-er or maybe 3%-er topic.
So much of the rest of us don't have the capability to full pay.
Those kids are glad to go to college and taking out loans is part of that for them. Beats working 40 hours a week and carrying a full load or taking extra years to finish. They also know that parents need to save for their retirement so as not to be a burden later and to preserve the nest egg by NOT co-signing.
Lucky those for whom this is a question.
Anonymous wrote:We can pay about 30k/year per kid...so basically instate. Kid got into a dream school with no merit (60k/year) we refused to take out loans and didn't want him to either.
I figure he will need to take out loans for grad school.
Anonymous wrote:Completely against it. DH was from a MC but broke family and they told him to go to THE best school. He ended up with so much debt, which meant he didn't follow the career path he wanted. Not going to do this to our kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I showed my kids how taking out the subsidized loans helped their credit. They did so. I'll pay them off three months after graduation. When they'll have credit at 720plus.
They've also had Roths since they were babysitting at 13/14 years old.
I'm big about financial literacy
That's a lot to pay for credit. I'd rather my kids just build their own with responsible use of credit cards - free way to build credit.
It’s an interest-free loan. It costs nothing. In fact I get to invest that cash instead of spending. Clock doesn’t start on govt loans til graduation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I showed my kids how taking out the subsidized loans helped their credit. They did so. I'll pay them off three months after graduation. When they'll have credit at 720plus.
They've also had Roths since they were babysitting at 13/14 years old.
I'm big about financial literacy
That's a lot to pay for credit. I'd rather my kids just build their own with responsible use of credit cards - free way to build credit.
Anonymous wrote:I think kids should avoid them- picks less expensive school, maybe a few years at a community college before transferring to save money, but I am also not against them. Not all families can afford to pay for all of college. I had student loans and could not have attended college otherwise.
Looking back I wish I had picked a less expensive school to minimize my loans, but at 18 I really had no clue; saw loans as no big deal and had no concept of how long they would take to a pay off. i didn't see having loans as having "skin in the game" as the loans never felt concrete to me until many year later.
Anonymous wrote:I showed my kids how taking out the subsidized loans helped their credit. They did so. I'll pay them off three months after graduation. When they'll have credit at 720plus.
They've also had Roths since they were babysitting at 13/14 years old.
I'm big about financial literacy