Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’re on $750k w one kid and I’m totally made uncomfortable by the whole thing, but it’s more on principle then pure logic, which I get. Spending $20k to send your kid somewhere I get, but that’s not an option. The fact it’s $45k or overcrowded schools makes me sick. It’s all in extremes and it’s hard for me to sit with.
It also bothers me that it makes a huge impact on my husband and my future. That’s our child’s future when it comes to spending when they’re adults. I know it’s not totally black-and-white, but I do see things like, would I rather give them a down payment on a mortgage? Or send them to private school? Which would be a better leg up in life? If I’m in early retirement because they went to public and thus can help fund other aspects of their life, which might be better? I don’t have any answers to this, but I think for me, it very quickly gets outside the numbers and into our values and it really leaves me torn to be honest.
You need a financial planner, stat. And lay of the credit cards.
Anonymous wrote:We’re on $750k w one kid and I’m totally made uncomfortable by the whole thing, but it’s more on principle then pure logic, which I get. Spending $20k to send your kid somewhere I get, but that’s not an option. The fact it’s $45k or overcrowded schools makes me sick. It’s all in extremes and it’s hard for me to sit with.
It also bothers me that it makes a huge impact on my husband and my future. That’s our child’s future when it comes to spending when they’re adults. I know it’s not totally black-and-white, but I do see things like, would I rather give them a down payment on a mortgage? Or send them to private school? Which would be a better leg up in life? If I’m in early retirement because they went to public and thus can help fund other aspects of their life, which might be better? I don’t have any answers to this, but I think for me, it very quickly gets outside the numbers and into our values and it really leaves me torn to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you. I'm a parent considering private school now for my three kids. HHI of $900k and a relatively low mortgage ($400k house, $2800/mo). And still the cost of private school is a major factor in our decision making process. About $100k/year in after tax dollars to send our three. I don't want to work forever but I want a retirement income that doesn't feel like a step back, so we need to save and invest a lot. Tuition would seriously impede our ability to do that, and it would also impact our travel budget, and just our general relaxed feeling about money. Three kids are expensive - all of the activities, enrichment, clothes, food, childcare for the baby. And like you said - when you add up the cost of a 13 year education for three kids - it most certainly is staggering. We are currently in public now and kids are doing well and are happy, but I am wrestling with whether we should move them to private to give them the best education we can.
You’re not in dc if you have a $400k HOUSE. And it sounds like private school is only $30k a kid where you live.
Anonymous wrote:We’re on $750k w one kid and I’m totally made uncomfortable by the whole thing, but it’s more on principle then pure logic, which I get. Spending $20k to send your kid somewhere I get, but that’s not an option. The fact it’s $45k or overcrowded schools makes me sick. It’s all in extremes and it’s hard for me to sit with.
It also bothers me that it makes a huge impact on my husband and my future. That’s our child’s future when it comes to spending when they’re adults. I know it’s not totally black-and-white, but I do see things like, would I rather give them a down payment on a mortgage? Or send them to private school? Which would be a better leg up in life? If I’m in early retirement because they went to public and thus can help fund other aspects of their life, which might be better? I don’t have any answers to this, but I think for me, it very quickly gets outside the numbers and into our values and it really leaves me torn to be honest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Best money I don’t have that I’ve ever spent. Low expectations in public school pushed me toward private MS and HS. I sent him to Catholic schools and got FA which helped since it was a stretch on my public teaching salary.
That’s not what OP is considering. She’s not FA and she’s not looking at Catholics.
Anonymous wrote:Faced similar situation and decided it didn’t make good financial sense. These schools are for the rich who don’t feel it at all and those able to get aid. The full pay folks in the middle get squeezed.
Anonymous wrote:Anecdotally, my parents and my in-laws made similar incomes.
My parents moved to the burbs and sent us through solid publics. My in-laws sent their kids to expensive privates. My parents now have significantly more money than my in-laws and we will inherit this money. It continues to grow.
The problem with private school is that it’s a very large fixed expense. It’s as large as a mortgage, yacht payment etc. Would you go and buy a yacht on your income and spend $4-5k a month on it? I get that it’s education, but you can also educate your children for free in a good public school district.
I think my in-laws wasted a lot of money on public schools and my husband and his siblings agree. They now the to make their kids feel guilty about how much they spent like they had any clue how much private K was.