Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op, my household makes 110k but used to make more like ninety and we currently have sixty thousand saved for our ninth grader and sixty five thousand saved for our tenth grader. Which we are now realizing isn’t enough. We are going to have each kid go instate, take the maximum of 5k per year of loans, and tighten our belts and cash flow the rest.
The fact that you have saved so little while making 400k and assumed your kids would get scholarships to cover much of the costs is just insane. Why should YOUR kids get scholarships to places like Cornell?
Can you step through the math on this for us? How have you been able to amass $125K for college savings over the course of about 15 years on a $90-$110K HHI? Even at an aggressive ROI of 8%, this means you’ve been saving $5K of your net HHI per year on average. But, you wouldn’t be doing this unless your were first contributing 20% of your gross HHI to retirement savings, as all financial advisors recommended. So, on a $110K HHI, you’ve been operating on a MAGI of $88K, a take home of maybe $72K and then an available budget of roughly $67K after your college savings. So all your remaining expenses are covered by $5,600/month, including your mortgage and/or rent?!? Seems unlikely. Explain it to us.
Funny that you’re choosing to criticize/question this rather than the op with a hhi of 400k+ who is whining about not being able to afford top colleges
Anonymous wrote:$20,000/year from your 529
$30,000 parent cashflow (from a $400,000 HHI is not unreasonable)
$15,000/ from parent savings
$ 5,500/year student loan
$ 5,000/year student earnings (summer and school year)
$75,000/year
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have any tips or recommendations for funding what will sure to be an expensive college experience for our kids?
We have two kids in high school, rising senior and rising sophomore. We’ve got $90K and $83K in 529 plans for them each, respectively. There is no chance we will qualify for need-based financial aid, even when both are in college at the same time. Several of the schools we’re contemplating are places like Cornell and Carnegie Mellon that no longer or simply don’t offer merit-based scholarships. So, we’re looking at $80K+ per year. 529 will cover about a fourth of the cost, but this is still $450K or so over 6 years. Kind of a lot to absorb as part of our monthly budget. What do most people do?
Outside, independent scholarships? Bonuses from work? Exercise stock options? Kids get student loans? Parents get loans? Refinance or second mortgage? Temporarily halt retirement contributions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have any tips or recommendations for funding what will sure to be an expensive college experience for our kids?
We have two kids in high school, rising senior and rising sophomore. We’ve got $90K and $83K in 529 plans for them each, respectively. There is no chance we will qualify for need-based financial aid, even when both are in college at the same time. Several of the schools we’re contemplating are places like Cornell and Carnegie Mellon that no longer or simply don’t offer merit-based scholarships. So, we’re looking at $80K+ per year. 529 will cover about a fourth of the cost, but this is still $450K or so over 6 years. Kind of a lot to absorb as part of our monthly budget. What do most people do?
Outside, independent scholarships? Bonuses from work? Exercise stock options? Kids get student loans? Parents get loans? Refinance or second mortgage? Temporarily halt retirement contributions?
If your kids are "that" good, they can get merit aids from state flagships/lower level privates. I'd not worry. If they are not "that" good, then you got a big problem
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op, my household makes 110k but used to make more like ninety and we currently have sixty thousand saved for our ninth grader and sixty five thousand saved for our tenth grader. Which we are now realizing isn’t enough. We are going to have each kid go instate, take the maximum of 5k per year of loans, and tighten our belts and cash flow the rest.
The fact that you have saved so little while making 400k and assumed your kids would get scholarships to cover much of the costs is just insane. Why should YOUR kids get scholarships to places like Cornell?
Unlike OP, your kids are well positioned to get financial aid so I wouldn’t write off non state options. Congrats on saving so much relative to your hhi and best wishes for your kids!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:op, my household makes 110k but used to make more like ninety and we currently have sixty thousand saved for our ninth grader and sixty five thousand saved for our tenth grader. Which we are now realizing isn’t enough. We are going to have each kid go instate, take the maximum of 5k per year of loans, and tighten our belts and cash flow the rest.
The fact that you have saved so little while making 400k and assumed your kids would get scholarships to cover much of the costs is just insane. Why should YOUR kids get scholarships to places like Cornell?
Can you step through the math on this for us? How have you been able to amass $125K for college savings over the course of about 15 years on a $90-$110K HHI? Even at an aggressive ROI of 8%, this means you’ve been saving $5K of your net HHI per year on average. But, you wouldn’t be doing this unless your were first contributing 20% of your gross HHI to retirement savings, as all financial advisors recommended. So, on a $110K HHI, you’ve been operating on a MAGI of $88K, a take home of maybe $72K and then an available budget of roughly $67K after your college savings. So all your remaining expenses are covered by $5,600/month, including your mortgage and/or rent?!? Seems unlikely. Explain it to us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have any tips or recommendations for funding what will sure to be an expensive college experience for our kids?
We have two kids in high school, rising senior and rising sophomore. We’ve got $90K and $83K in 529 plans for them each, respectively. There is no chance we will qualify for need-based financial aid, even when both are in college at the same time. Several of the schools we’re contemplating are places like Cornell and Carnegie Mellon that no longer or simply don’t offer merit-based scholarships. So, we’re looking at $80K+ per year. 529 will cover about a fourth of the cost, but this is still $450K or so over 6 years. Kind of a lot to absorb as part of our monthly budget. What do most people do?
Outside, independent scholarships? Bonuses from work? Exercise stock options? Kids get student loans? Parents get loans? Refinance or second mortgage? Temporarily halt retirement contributions?
Are your kids rockstars or just regular DCUM smart? If the latter, then your state school, lower tier state schools that give you merit (Alabama, Kansas etc), or low tier privates that heavily discount. You choose which environment you want. This advice has been repeated nine thousand times on this forum.
Don’t know, but my rising senior has taken nearly every AP class available and has an unweighted GPA of 3.98 and a weighted one a lot higher. Took the SAT as a junior and got a 790 on math and a 740 on reading / writing on his first attempt. These seem like Cornell-worthy results.
Ok I’m calling troll on OP. No one could be this clueless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have any tips or recommendations for funding what will sure to be an expensive college experience for our kids?
We have two kids in high school, rising senior and rising sophomore. We’ve got $90K and $83K in 529 plans for them each, respectively. There is no chance we will qualify for need-based financial aid, even when both are in college at the same time. Several of the schools we’re contemplating are places like Cornell and Carnegie Mellon that no longer or simply don’t offer merit-based scholarships. So, we’re looking at $80K+ per year. 529 will cover about a fourth of the cost, but this is still $450K or so over 6 years. Kind of a lot to absorb as part of our monthly budget. What do most people do?
Outside, independent scholarships? Bonuses from work? Exercise stock options? Kids get student loans? Parents get loans? Refinance or second mortgage? Temporarily halt retirement contributions?
Are your kids rockstars or just regular DCUM smart? If the latter, then your state school, lower tier state schools that give you merit (Alabama, Kansas etc), or low tier privates that heavily discount. You choose which environment you want. This advice has been repeated nine thousand times on this forum.
Don’t know, but my rising senior has taken nearly every AP class available and has an unweighted GPA of 3.98 and a weighted one a lot higher. Took the SAT as a junior and got a 790 on math and a 740 on reading / writing on his first attempt. These seem like Cornell-worthy results.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have any tips or recommendations for funding what will sure to be an expensive college experience for our kids?
We have two kids in high school, rising senior and rising sophomore. We’ve got $90K and $83K in 529 plans for them each, respectively. There is no chance we will qualify for need-based financial aid, even when both are in college at the same time. Several of the schools we’re contemplating are places like Cornell and Carnegie Mellon that no longer or simply don’t offer merit-based scholarships. So, we’re looking at $80K+ per year. 529 will cover about a fourth of the cost, but this is still $450K or so over 6 years. Kind of a lot to absorb as part of our monthly budget. What do most people do?
Outside, independent scholarships? Bonuses from work? Exercise stock options? Kids get student loans? Parents get loans? Refinance or second mortgage? Temporarily halt retirement contributions?
Anonymous wrote:op, my household makes 110k but used to make more like ninety and we currently have sixty thousand saved for our ninth grader and sixty five thousand saved for our tenth grader. Which we are now realizing isn’t enough. We are going to have each kid go instate, take the maximum of 5k per year of loans, and tighten our belts and cash flow the rest.
The fact that you have saved so little while making 400k and assumed your kids would get scholarships to cover much of the costs is just insane. Why should YOUR kids get scholarships to places like Cornell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP are you insane or just stupid? You make $400k, have $2m+ in retirement accounts, and you're stumped about how to pay for college for your kids? You've been banking on the (mistaken) assumption that your kids would get merit scholarships to Ivy League and near peer schools?
I've got to say, as a two-nonprofit household that has forgone every luxury to be able to afford the best schools that our two kids might be able to get into, people like you just blow my mind.
OP again. I’m definitely not stupid nor am I insane, but I do appreciate your candor. We’ve programmed a great deal of discretionary spending into our budget. We have no debt with the exception of our mortgage, which is less than 20% of our base take home pay. I think we can make some significant spending cuts to make this work and augment, if necessary, with temporary cuts to our retirement contributions. Sort of feels like colleges expect parents to liquidate all savings and take out both loans and second mortgages, which is something I just didn’t see coming when we started putting money into 529 plans 16+ years ago.
And, yes, I was definitely surprised to learn that merit-based scholarships are not available at Ivy League and comparable schools.
Different poster here and, sorry OP but you are definitely coming across as stupid, or at best mind boggling naive. I think many of us are struggling to understand how you and your husband can make the salaries you claim and yet be so financially/socially inept. I find it particularly hard to believe that your alleged T-20 graduate husband was unaware that ivys don’t give merit aid (and haven’t for at least the last 40 years).
NP. I think OP is sitting at a NW of some $3.2M+ in their mid-40s. I hardly think that constitutes being financially/socially inept! Maybe a little unbalanced distribution across financial instruments. Also, why would OP’s DH be aware that Ivys don’t give merit aid if he went to college as a student in financial need? Ivys DO give a ton of merit-based scholarships, but only to students that also exhibit a financial need. And no one getting a Ph.D. applies for or needs financial aid. It is all paid for out of research grants. How would the DH have acquired first-hand knowledge of this nuisance?
Anonymous wrote:op, my household makes 110k but used to make more like ninety and we currently have sixty thousand saved for our ninth grader and sixty five thousand saved for our tenth grader. Which we are now realizing isn’t enough. We are going to have each kid go instate, take the maximum of 5k per year of loans, and tighten our belts and cash flow the rest.
The fact that you have saved so little while making 400k and assumed your kids would get scholarships to cover much of the costs is just insane. Why should YOUR kids get scholarships to places like Cornell?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP are you insane or just stupid? You make $400k, have $2m+ in retirement accounts, and you're stumped about how to pay for college for your kids? You've been banking on the (mistaken) assumption that your kids would get merit scholarships to Ivy League and near peer schools?
I've got to say, as a two-nonprofit household that has forgone every luxury to be able to afford the best schools that our two kids might be able to get into, people like you just blow my mind.
OP again. I’m definitely not stupid nor am I insane, but I do appreciate your candor. We’ve programmed a great deal of discretionary spending into our budget. We have no debt with the exception of our mortgage, which is less than 20% of our base take home pay. I think we can make some significant spending cuts to make this work and augment, if necessary, with temporary cuts to our retirement contributions. Sort of feels like colleges expect parents to liquidate all savings and take out both loans and second mortgages, which is something I just didn’t see coming when we started putting money into 529 plans 16+ years ago.
And, yes, I was definitely surprised to learn that merit-based scholarships are not available at Ivy League and comparable schools.
Different poster here and, sorry OP but you are definitely coming across as stupid, or at best mind boggling naive. I think many of us are struggling to understand how you and your husband can make the salaries you claim and yet be so financially/socially inept. I find it particularly hard to believe that your alleged T-20 graduate husband was unaware that ivys don’t give merit aid (and haven’t for at least the last 40 years).
NP. I think OP is sitting at a NW of some $3.2M+ in their mid-40s. I hardly think that constitutes being financially/socially inept! Maybe a little unbalanced distribution across financial instruments. Also, why would OP’s DH be aware that Ivys don’t give merit aid if he went to college as a student in financial need? Ivys DO give a ton of merit-based scholarships, but only to students that also exhibit a financial need. And no one getting a Ph.D. applies for or needs financial aid. It is all paid for out of research grants. How would the DH have acquired first-hand knowledge of this nuisance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP are you insane or just stupid? You make $400k, have $2m+ in retirement accounts, and you're stumped about how to pay for college for your kids? You've been banking on the (mistaken) assumption that your kids would get merit scholarships to Ivy League and near peer schools?
I've got to say, as a two-nonprofit household that has forgone every luxury to be able to afford the best schools that our two kids might be able to get into, people like you just blow my mind.
OP again. I’m definitely not stupid nor am I insane, but I do appreciate your candor. We’ve programmed a great deal of discretionary spending into our budget. We have no debt with the exception of our mortgage, which is less than 20% of our base take home pay. I think we can make some significant spending cuts to make this work and augment, if necessary, with temporary cuts to our retirement contributions. Sort of feels like colleges expect parents to liquidate all savings and take out both loans and second mortgages, which is something I just didn’t see coming when we started putting money into 529 plans 16+ years ago.
And, yes, I was definitely surprised to learn that merit-based scholarships are not available at Ivy League and comparable schools.
Different poster here and, sorry OP but you are definitely coming across as stupid, or at best mind boggling naive. I think many of us are struggling to understand how you and your husband can make the salaries you claim and yet be so financially/socially inept. I find it particularly hard to believe that your alleged T-20 graduate husband was unaware that ivys don’t give merit aid (and haven’t for at least the last 40 years).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP are you insane or just stupid? You make $400k, have $2m+ in retirement accounts, and you're stumped about how to pay for college for your kids? You've been banking on the (mistaken) assumption that your kids would get merit scholarships to Ivy League and near peer schools?
I've got to say, as a two-nonprofit household that has forgone every luxury to be able to afford the best schools that our two kids might be able to get into, people like you just blow my mind.
OP again. I’m definitely not stupid nor am I insane, but I do appreciate your candor. We’ve programmed a great deal of discretionary spending into our budget. We have no debt with the exception of our mortgage, which is less than 20% of our base take home pay. I think we can make some significant spending cuts to make this work and augment, if necessary, with temporary cuts to our retirement contributions. Sort of feels like colleges expect parents to liquidate all savings and take out both loans and second mortgages, which is something I just didn’t see coming when we started putting money into 529 plans 16+ years ago.
And, yes, I was definitely surprised to learn that merit-based scholarships are not available at Ivy League and comparable schools.