Anonymous wrote:No aid, but two college kids got full ride 4 and 5 year engineering scholarships with a monthly and book stipends. Hoping our other two kids still at home follow in their footsteps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$240k a year. got about 35k from princeton (total coa is now ~50k)
Princeton says most families with income of up to $300,000 will get some financial aid. I think at the tippy-top schools, you can get aid with an income of $240,000.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? That’s not a small income.
-Only just got to this income recently
-Prior student loans just finally paid off
-Prior car loans (not fancy cars but still)
-All of above meant behind in retirement and trying to catch up
-High cost of living area (did ok for awhile by living cheaply in a high crime area but had to go more expensive when we couldn't take the gunshot sounds anymore)
-Essentially in the "donut hole"
It sucks that you just got to this level and now must pivot to saving for retirement. Wish FAFSA could take intergenerational wealth into account. Yet that's not the case. Folks need to make sure that their kids consider schools known to be generous with merit aid.
Anonymous wrote:The new provision in the FAFSA about not counting multiple kids makes it really challenging for families with HHI of 200,000 to 250,000. I feel like the rules of the game changed. When we ran numbers of saving for college we always counted that it was a total cost of college by number of kids in college. We have kids one year apart and the oldest is young for his grade. We have always planned for a gap year. Both our kids will be in college at the same time.
So even for public our expected contribution is around $45000. So maybe doable with one child but not with two kids. We didn't used to make so much money and because housing is so expensive we weren't able to save any money for college. If we are expected to pay $90,000 a year it makes more sense for my spouse who makes 95,000 to not work for the years the kids are in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I helped a couple kids in this bracket this year (with admissions and with applying for and negotiating FA). Both got excellent aid -- one from an Ivy, another from a few top LACs. Both offered about 1/2 coa worth of aid. Need based.
Also got some great merit offers too.
NP: Were these ED or EA candidates? Ran the NPC on a bunch of schools. Most have EFC at $30-$40K, which is doable for us with 529, Grandmas, and our earnings. A few were $50K+. I don't think ED is an option for us. DC's favorite school so far is one of the $50Ks, of course. I would prefer to have the option to compare offers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? That’s not a small income.
-Only just got to this income recently
-Prior student loans just finally paid off
-Prior car loans (not fancy cars but still)
-All of above meant behind in retirement and trying to catch up
-High cost of living area (did ok for awhile by living cheaply in a high crime area but had to go more expensive when we couldn't take the gunshot sounds anymore)
-Essentially in the "donut hole"
Anonymous wrote:$240k a year. got about 35k from princeton (total coa is now ~50k)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the difference between merit and financial aid?
One is based on academics (GPA, test scores...merit) the other is based on finances (your parent's income and assets...financial).
Anonymous wrote:If so, what was the offer for private vs public colleges and universities?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zero. from FAFSA. I think the previous posters are lying. From FAFSA at 250K HHI I think the D of Ed will say you should fund at 100 percent, which is what happened to us
CSS will give you a lot more, especially if you have multiple kids