Anonymous wrote:As a PP said, it really depends on your budget. Break it down.
We are paying about 40k in tuition on an income of 190k, planning to be closer to 50k in a few years when a younger child moves to a school with higher tuition. They way it breaks down for us, we are living on one income for housing, basic operating expenses, and retirement plans. The second income is going to student loan payments and the kids' tuition/childcare. This works for us, as we acclimated to housing and lifestyle choices while we still lived on a smaller income. Once education became a question, we've decided to invest in school rather than upgrade in other areas.
This works *for us,* but your situation may well be different, based on what you want, where you live, and what will place you in a feeling of sacrifice that will get under your skin. It is so individual.
Break it down, and evaluate closely if there are debts or expenses you can eliminate that you are currently ignoring. Don't promise to cut things that are deeply important to you.
Anonymous wrote:As a PP said, it really depends on your budget. Break it down.
We are paying about 40k in tuition on an income of 190k, planning to be closer to 50k in a few years when a younger child moves to a school with higher tuition. They way it breaks down for us, we are living on one income for housing, basic operating expenses, and retirement plans. The second income is going to student loan payments and the kids' tuition/childcare. This works for us, as we acclimated to housing and lifestyle choices while we still lived on a smaller income. Once education became a question, we've decided to invest in school rather than upgrade in other areas.
This works *for us,* but your situation may well be different, based on what you want, where you live, and what will place you in a feeling of sacrifice that will get under your skin. It is so individual.
Break it down, and evaluate closely if there are debts or expenses you can eliminate that you are currently ignoring. Don't promise to cut things that are deeply important to you.
Anonymous wrote:As a PP said, it really depends on your budget. Break it down.
We are paying about 40k in tuition on an income of 190k, planning to be closer to 50k in a few years when a younger child moves to a school with higher tuition. They way it breaks down for us, we are living on one income for housing, basic operating expenses, and retirement plans. The second income is going to student loan payments and the kids' tuition/childcare. This works for us, as we acclimated to housing and lifestyle choices while we still lived on a smaller income. Once education became a question, we've decided to invest in school rather than upgrade in other areas.
This works *for us,* but your situation may well be different, based on what you want, where you live, and what will place you in a feeling of sacrifice that will get under your skin. It is so individual.
Break it down, and evaluate closely if there are debts or expenses you can eliminate that you are currently ignoring. Don't promise to cut things that are deeply important to you.
Anonymous wrote:As a PP said, it really depends on your budget. Break it down.
We are paying about 40k in tuition on an income of 190k, planning to be closer to 50k in a few years when a younger child moves to a school with higher tuition. They way it breaks down for us, we are living on one income for housing, basic operating expenses, and retirement plans. The second income is going to student loan payments and the kids' tuition/childcare. This works for us, as we acclimated to housing and lifestyle choices while we still lived on a smaller income. Once education became a question, we've decided to invest in school rather than upgrade in other areas.
This works *for us,* but your situation may well be different, based on what you want, where you live, and what will place you in a feeling of sacrifice that will get under your skin. It is so individual.
Break it down, and evaluate closely if there are debts or expenses you can eliminate that you are currently ignoring. Don't promise to cut things that are deeply important to you.
Anonymous wrote:We are $800k and can barely afford 2 in private
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you think of a family with a household income of 250K to send their two kids to private school? Other than the tuition, do you think socially the kids can fit in? What's the medium income for the families in private schools? Where to find such statistics?
It depends. If you send two kids to Potomac school HS, it will cost you about 86k/year after tax. Not possible for 250k income.
Possible with some financial aid.
Which you probably won’t get at your household income level unless they really, really want you because you bring something unique or at least really special to the school body. Even then financial aid seems unlikely.
I know one family that makes around that much and gets aid--however, they have three kids, are "hooked," and kids attend a school that is not in high demand here and is pretty inexpensive relative to Sidwell, GDS, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you think of a family with a household income of 250K to send their two kids to private school? Other than the tuition, do you think socially the kids can fit in? What's the medium income for the families in private schools? Where to find such statistics?
It depends. If you send two kids to Potomac school HS, it will cost you about 86k/year after tax. Not possible for 250k income.
Possible with some financial aid.
Which you probably won’t get at your household income level unless they really, really want you because you bring something unique or at least really special to the school body. Even then financial aid seems unlikely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you think of a family with a household income of 250K to send their two kids to private school? Other than the tuition, do you think socially the kids can fit in? What's the medium income for the families in private schools? Where to find such statistics?
It depends. If you send two kids to Potomac school HS, it will cost you about 86k/year after tax. Not possible for 250k income.
Possible with some financial aid.
Anonymous wrote:What do you think of a family with a household income of 250K to send their two kids to private school? Other than the tuition, do you think socially the kids can fit in? What's the medium income for the families in private schools? Where to find such statistics?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you think of a family with a household income of 250K to send their two kids to private school? Other than the tuition, do you think socially the kids can fit in? What's the medium income for the families in private schools? Where to find such statistics?
It depends. If you send two kids to Potomac school HS, it will cost you about 86k/year after tax. Not possible for 250k income.