Anonymous wrote:Merit scholarship for one at an OOS flagship makes it within $5k of UMD - plenty in the 529 with a little left over toward grad school
Full pay at an OOS private for the other (over $82k). Our plan is some from cash flow, some from 529, some from other savings, and some from scholarahips. It's the dream school, so we will make it work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So a parent in the Teen forum mentioned taking Parent Plus Loans to send their DC to college and possibly having their DC contribute to the "college expenses" with part-time/summer jobs.
Most people said if they couldn't afford paying for College they would send their kids to Community College to start.
I see a lot of talk about top schools, OOS schools, flagship schools, etc in this forum. How are people paying/planning to pay for their kids College education?
Scholarships, aid, debt, rich grandparents mostly. Very few folks have "fully funded 529s" with $200,000-$250,000 per kid. But those ones are of course highly visible here.
Anonymous wrote:Community college isn’t even pocket change anymore.
Although I have figured out that an out of state community college tuition would be cheaper than trying to take a couple classes at our in state local university before enrolling full time for a subject our local community college does not offer.
Anonymous wrote:Have “well-funded” 529s started when they were babies. But not sure that we even have enough in the eldest’s for next year! He’s a junior. The costs are outrageous. But I admit we haven’t considered u of Maryland. I’m old ( went to college in the 70s) and a snob. Go ahead flame me
Anonymous wrote:So a parent in the Teen forum mentioned taking Parent Plus Loans to send their DC to college and possibly having their DC contribute to the "college expenses" with part-time/summer jobs.
Most people said if they couldn't afford paying for College they would send their kids to Community College to start.
I see a lot of talk about top schools, OOS schools, flagship schools, etc in this forum. How are people paying/planning to pay for their kids College education?
Anonymous wrote:We contributed up to the amount of the annual gift tax exclusion (for reference, it is $17k for 2023) per kid per year since birth and it looks like we'll have enough for wherever they want to attend. Oldest is in eighth grade and 529 plan is in excellent shape and may even have some left over for grad school, a sibling or the next generation. High joint income but never over $1m/year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have “well-funded” 529s started when they were babies. But not sure that we even have enough in the eldest’s for next year! He’s a junior. The costs are outrageous. But I admit we haven’t considered u of Maryland. I’m old ( went to college in the 70s) and a snob. Go ahead flame me
You're not alone, but consider that this year, UMD's admit rate is 34%.
I don’t understand why people think that their families are too good for public universities. There are smart people with diverse backgrounds at state schools.
Anonymous wrote:Have “well-funded” 529s started when they were babies. But not sure that we even have enough in the eldest’s for next year! He’s a junior. The costs are outrageous. But I admit we haven’t considered u of Maryland. I’m old ( went to college in the 70s) and a snob. Go ahead flame me
Anonymous wrote:Have “well-funded” 529s started when they were babies. But not sure that we even have enough in the eldest’s for next year! He’s a junior. The costs are outrageous. But I admit we haven’t considered u of Maryland. I’m old ( went to college in the 70s) and a snob. Go ahead flame me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have “well-funded” 529s started when they were babies. But not sure that we even have enough in the eldest’s for next year! He’s a junior. The costs are outrageous. But I admit we haven’t considered u of Maryland. I’m old ( went to college in the 70s) and a snob. Go ahead flame me
You're not alone, but consider that this year, UMD's admit rate is 34%.