Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with your public schools? You do realize that as educated upper middle class professionals, your children will do well at any school, don't you? It appears that you may want to send your kids to a private for the status it gives your family. Not worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Just to be clear, when you make in the 400k range through salary and live in Montgomery County about 38% is going to taxes. Through in maxing out on SS, Medicare tax and the new health care tax and other taxes and a good chuck of your income is allocated to the gov't. So 60k for school post tax is a lot more than 60k. Also, if you have two parents working fulltime you usually have to pay extra for care to cover before and after school, summer vacation, and the random days off so that adds a good bit on top of the private school tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With how little you have in retirement savings you are insane to think about spending that kind of money on private schools.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good gravy, there are scads of pricey private schools in the Washington area. If so many people think $300k is not sufficient HHI to have the kids go to these schools, how much is needed? $500k HHI? $1 million?
We make over $400K and would have to seriously change our standard of living to spend an additional $5K a month on private school. We save a bit more than that each month, but who wants to live that close to the line?
I completely agree with you. It is simply crazy to me that people will struggle to pay $60k a year on private school when we live in a region with some of the best public schools in the country. Unless and until something goes wrong at our local public school, or I feel that my child has issues that require private education, I simply can't rationalize that outlay year and after year. Of course, if 60K was nothing but a drop in the bucket because I made 1 mil a year, then paying for private school would be a no-brainer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This income level is way beyond my league but will a child from a home with a HHI of $300k be the poor kid at a private school?
It's one thing to be a scholarship kid at Georgetown Day when your unmarried Mom is making $50k but the OP's situation sounds quite different.
I was thinking the same thing. Kids in a 300K household can't be considered "poor." Their parents won't be able to buy a house on the coast of Maine but they'll be renting one for two weeks in August!
Anonymous wrote:Good gravy, there are scads of pricey private schools in the Washington area. If so many people think $300k is not sufficient HHI to have the kids go to these schools, how much is needed? $500k HHI? $1 million?
Anonymous wrote:With how little you have in retirement savings you are insane to think about spending that kind of money on private schools.