Anonymous wrote:Thanks for that pretty useless post, 12:50. This is a forum set in DC.
I make $240,000 a year and I save every cent of that for my kids' college, since I have a sugar daddy AND a fairy godmother who pay for everything I might need, such as housing, shoes and vacations. See, wasn't that pointless to read?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have saved quite a bit for my son for college.
It is important to remember to save for yourself and your retirement first. Your child may be eligible for scholarship and loans (although loans seem pretty much out of control right now) for college. He or she may work during school.
However, for your retirement, no one is going to give you a loan or a scholarship! Pay yourself first.
This is what we are doing. DH and I make 160,000. We both have jobs with pensions. We save an additional 2,000 a month for retirement. We don't have anything left over for college. We figure when our kids (now 3 and 5) go to college we will stop funding retirement and we will use the 2,000 a month to pay for college so each kid will get 24,000 a year for college. The rest will be up to them to pay.
I know retirement assets are not included when financial aid is calculated, but how are 529's treated?
Anonymous wrote:We have saved quite a bit for my son for college.
It is important to remember to save for yourself and your retirement first. Your child may be eligible for scholarship and loans (although loans seem pretty much out of control right now) for college. He or she may work during school.
However, for your retirement, no one is going to give you a loan or a scholarship! Pay yourself first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are waiting until kids no longer need daycare to start saving. of that 2800/month we currently spend on care, we will put 1800 toward college (900/each) and 1000 toward our retirements (we are not saving the max now).
You might want to think about the expenses that will replace your daycare costs enforce you count on being able to bank all of that money. When you're paying for daycare, it's hard to imagine this, but kids get more expensive as they get older.
It depends on what your expenses are when they are younger. If they are already in activities and other stuff and you keep it reasonable, it does go down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are waiting until kids no longer need daycare to start saving. of that 2800/month we currently spend on care, we will put 1800 toward college (900/each) and 1000 toward our retirements (we are not saving the max now).
You might want to think about the expenses that will replace your daycare costs enforce you count on being able to bank all of that money. When you're paying for daycare, it's hard to imagine this, but kids get more expensive as they get older.
Anonymous wrote:we are waiting until kids no longer need daycare to start saving. of that 2800/month we currently spend on care, we will put 1800 toward college (900/each) and 1000 toward our retirements (we are not saving the max now).
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for that pretty useless post, 12:50. This is a forum set in DC.
I make $240,000 a year and I save every cent of that for my kids' college, since I have a sugar daddy AND a fairy godmother who pay for everything I might need, such as housing, shoes and vacations. See, wasn't that pointless to read?