Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, is financial aid only given at private universities with a large endowment? Such as Harvard?
Harvard is different. Use their NPC.
Harvard and a small number of schools with very, very large endowments are able to give financial aid to all students who qualify in the form of grants.
Harvard, the Ivies, and extremely selective universities and SLACs do not give merit scholarships, just financial aid.
right, and those who qualify are all under $120K or so (I'm not sure of the exact number but it's around this). There's no way your'e getting a dime on a $200K DC income.
And there's no merit aid.
Nor should you. $200K is a lot of money.
Hahahah , what year 1985? Idiot
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep reading in articles that the biggest mistake in FAFSA is not filling it out because you think you won't get anything. So at hhi $300k, should I bother filling it out or is it a big waste of time?
"the bad news is that some colleges (admittedly not many) do require the FAFSA for all scholarships, whether need-based or not, so you have to dig around on college Web sites and read all the fine print to make sure that your son’s target schools aren’t on that list."
http://www.collegeconfidential.com/dean/fafsa-required-for-merit-aid-hopeful/
Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind, most schools do not meet your EFC or include loans within the EFC.
Anonymous wrote:I keep reading in articles that the biggest mistake in FAFSA is not filling it out because you think you won't get anything. So at hhi $300k, should I bother filling it out or is it a big waste of time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, is financial aid only given at private universities with a large endowment? Such as Harvard?
Harvard is different. Use their NPC.
Harvard and a small number of schools with very, very large endowments are able to give financial aid to all students who qualify in the form of grants.
Harvard, the Ivies, and extremely selective universities and SLACs do not give merit scholarships, just financial aid.
+1
The NPC makes Harvard unaffordable for us (HHI $225K). Too bad, because our DC is qualified.
Qualified is all very well, but getting in is quite different: it becomes a lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, is financial aid only given at private universities with a large endowment? Such as Harvard?
Harvard is different. Use their NPC.
Harvard and a small number of schools with very, very large endowments are able to give financial aid to all students who qualify in the form of grants.
Harvard, the Ivies, and extremely selective universities and SLACs do not give merit scholarships, just financial aid.
+1
The NPC makes Harvard unaffordable for us (HHI $225K). Too bad, because our DC is qualified.
Anonymous wrote:I keep reading in articles that the biggest mistake in FAFSA is not filling it out because you think you won't get anything. So at hhi $300k, should I bother filling it out or is it a big waste of time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, is financial aid only given at private universities with a large endowment? Such as Harvard?
Harvard is different. Use their NPC.
Harvard and a small number of schools with very, very large endowments are able to give financial aid to all students who qualify in the form of grants.
Harvard, the Ivies, and extremely selective universities and SLACs do not give merit scholarships, just financial aid.
right, and those who qualify are all under $120K or so (I'm not sure of the exact number but it's around this). There's no way your'e getting a dime on a $200K DC income.
And there's no merit aid.
Nor should you. $200K is a lot of money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^
You don't know the specifics of my situation and you don't know what you are talking about. We have a mortgage on one home, drive 10yo cars, and have never taken our kids abroad on vacation. There are a lot of people like us in this area. $225K in DC is not the same as $225K in Tulsa, but the EFC calculator does not take that into account.
Tuition increases make affording school a huge problem for the vast majority of people, even the upper middle class.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jonathan-r-cole/misc...ptions-about-the_b_779444.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/18/college-t...h-median-income_n_5505653.html
Scroll down this piece to college tuition:
http://www.mybudget360.com/cost-of-living-2014-inf...014-data-housing-cars-college/
Exactly. Any movement to get them to put in cost differentials for different cities?
Anonymous wrote:^^^
You don't know the specifics of my situation and you don't know what you are talking about. We have a mortgage on one home, drive 10yo cars, and have never taken our kids abroad on vacation. There are a lot of people like us in this area. $225K in DC is not the same as $225K in Tulsa, but the EFC calculator does not take that into account.
Tuition increases make affording school a huge problem for the vast majority of people, even the upper middle class.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jonathan-r-cole/misc...ptions-about-the_b_779444.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/18/college-t...h-median-income_n_5505653.html
Scroll down this piece to college tuition:
http://www.mybudget360.com/cost-of-living-2014-inf...014-data-housing-cars-college/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question. Do they only look at income when determining financial aid?
What stops someone 50 years old and HHI $250k with say 3-4 kids and net worth of $2 million (not too much, not too little) from quitting their job so that HHI is $0 and getting lots of ginancial aid for all theor kids? In this hypothetical scenario, it would make sense vs. working and shelling out 100k or more a year on tuition. Thoughts?
You have to do it two years before your child gets to college. FAFSA for next fall are based on 2015 returns.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, is financial aid only given at private universities with a large endowment? Such as Harvard?
Harvard is different. Use their NPC.
Harvard and a small number of schools with very, very large endowments are able to give financial aid to all students who qualify in the form of grants.
Harvard, the Ivies, and extremely selective universities and SLACs do not give merit scholarships, just financial aid.
+1
The NPC makes Harvard unaffordable for us (HHI $225K). Too bad, because our DC is qualified.
Should've saved.