Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Yes, because otherwise you’d be encouraging people to shelter (no pun intended) their wealth in real estate. Money is money, whether you choose to put it in your house or the stock market.
Except your home is not a liquid asset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools are getting away with some very fuzzy wording, in may mind. Their idea of "demonstrated need" involves loans, definitely. Then they come away feeling good about themselves, but meanwhile they have saddled my child with loans she will have for year to come! I will say that the FAFSA calculator is pretty darn eye opening as to what they think we as parents are supposed to be able to contribute. I don't know how they think it's gonna happen, but for us with a combined income of just over 200K and another child in college, they expect us to contribute $30K per year for our rising college student. And they offered her $1K in work study and $5K in student loans. Total BS.
Right, but then won't your older kid's drop too? Sounds like your efc is 60k, now halved for each kid when #2 enters because #1 is still in school, right?
This is actually a great deal, but it may not last. The new college finance bill the passed congress a few years ago will go into effect next year, and Lamar Alexander added a clause that eliminates this siblings at the same time benefit. For many schools, you may see that 30k double.
My #2 will be applying next year, and I hope some css schools will keep that provision even if FAFSA calculations drop it.
But at 200k annual, 60k efc is not bad and 30k is excellent. You should have some money saved, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One thing is for sure, the schools definition of “need”’ is likely far from your family’s definition of need. My HHI is about $300k and our EFC is almost $80k so…. There ya go.
At $300K, you can afford to pay for college. If you choose to spend it on a more expensive house, cars, travel, dining out, etc. then why should someone else subsidize you when some of us make 1/3 what you are making and manage to save?
NP. BS. These top 50 schools are sticking families with $80k tabs because they CAN. They do not need to charge this much to break even. There's no "subsidizing".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools are getting away with some very fuzzy wording, in may mind. Their idea of "demonstrated need" involves loans, definitely. Then they come away feeling good about themselves, but meanwhile they have saddled my child with loans she will have for year to come! I will say that the FAFSA calculator is pretty darn eye opening as to what they think we as parents are supposed to be able to contribute. I don't know how they think it's gonna happen, but for us with a combined income of just over 200K and another child in college, they expect us to contribute $30K per year for our rising college student. And they offered her $1K in work study and $5K in student loans. Total BS.
You actually sound awful. Why didn’t you save more for college? 30k a year on a 200k HHI seems like a bargain. I don’t care if you have 3 kids in college. You decided to have the number of kids you did and how to space them out. Now you are complaining that you have to pay for college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Because you choose a higher priced house over college savings. We bought a tiny sh@t shack so we could save for college. Why should we have the same income, you choose not to save, scream poverty and live in a much nicer house, take vacations, etc. Yes, you can borrow against your equity or save.
These are the same people who try to sell this doughnut hole sob story nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Yes, because otherwise you’d be encouraging people to shelter (no pun intended) their wealth in real estate. Money is money, whether you choose to put it in your house or the stock market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
I would assume the answer is yes, unfortunately. Most schools that use CSS consider home equity. I told my child that he couldn't apply to any school that considers home equity AND isn't known for generous merit aid. Many schools dropped off the list.
Why didn't you save?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Because you choose a higher priced house over college savings. We bought a tiny sh@t shack so we could save for college. Why should we have the same income, you choose not to save, scream poverty and live in a much nicer house, take vacations, etc. Yes, you can borrow against your equity or save.
These are the same people who try to sell this doughnut hole sob story nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Schools are getting away with some very fuzzy wording, in may mind. Their idea of "demonstrated need" involves loans, definitely. Then they come away feeling good about themselves, but meanwhile they have saddled my child with loans she will have for year to come! I will say that the FAFSA calculator is pretty darn eye opening as to what they think we as parents are supposed to be able to contribute. I don't know how they think it's gonna happen, but for us with a combined income of just over 200K and another child in college, they expect us to contribute $30K per year for our rising college student. And they offered her $1K in work study and $5K in student loans. Total BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Because you choose a higher priced house over college savings. We bought a tiny sh@t shack so we could save for college. Why should we have the same income, you choose not to save, scream poverty and live in a much nicer house, take vacations, etc. Yes, you can borrow against your equity or save.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your HHI is $200k and you have $500k+ home equity you should be full pay.
What should home equity have to do with it? Are you expected to borrow against your home?
I would assume the answer is yes, unfortunately. Most schools that use CSS consider home equity. I told my child that he couldn't apply to any school that considers home equity AND isn't known for generous merit aid. Many schools dropped off the list.