Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they look at your NW?
+1
I'll be retired and my income might be 200k. The kid's 529 is around 300k. Hopefully, NW and 529 does not count, then we could use 529 for qualified living expenses.
Anonymous wrote:Do they look at your NW?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:00Anonymous wrote:“Typical assets” at Harvard is 200k
Yes, and maybe even lower. So the deal of tuition free for <$200k income is more of a marketing thing than a real benefit for families making $150k-$200k.
This. They don't want to look elitist. But they already know that the number of families making $150-200K that have assets below $200K and applying to Harvard is very small.
??? I know many families like this -- most of them are single parent families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder what the net price would be for someone making 250k or right outside the limits. Does it jump up from free to 60k+ or is there an incremental increase?
Also, the "free" part is tuition. Room and board, fees, and personal expense estimates are an additional 20k probably, at least.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:00Anonymous wrote:“Typical assets” at Harvard is 200k
Yes, and maybe even lower. So the deal of tuition free for <$200k income is more of a marketing thing than a real benefit for families making $150k-$200k.
This. They don't want to look elitist. But they already know that the number of families making $150-200K that have assets below $200K and applying to Harvard is very small.
??? I know many families like this -- most of them are single parent families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:00Anonymous wrote:“Typical assets” at Harvard is 200k
Yes, and maybe even lower. So the deal of tuition free for <$200k income is more of a marketing thing than a real benefit for families making $150k-$200k.
This. They don't want to look elitist. But they already know that the number of families making $150-200K that have assets below $200K and applying to Harvard is very small.
Anonymous wrote:Debatable details aside, it's great to see the cartel smashed and schools competing on price.
Anonymous wrote:00Anonymous wrote:“Typical assets” at Harvard is 200k
Yes, and maybe even lower. So the deal of tuition free for <$200k income is more of a marketing thing than a real benefit for families making $150k-$200k.
Anonymous wrote:00Anonymous wrote:“Typical assets” at Harvard is 200k
Yes, and maybe even lower. So the deal of tuition free for <$200k income is more of a marketing thing than a real benefit for families making $150k-$200k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Costs are going up. Inflation continues. Of course financial aid will also go up.
Interesting that Harvard felt the need to announce this, as if it's a change from business-as-usual.
Many families assume that the school is too expensive and don't allow kids to even bother applying to schools that are 90K annually, not realizing how financial aid works at schools with healthy endowments.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder what the net price would be for someone making 250k or right outside the limits. Does it jump up from free to 60k+ or is there an incremental increase?