Anonymous wrote:I said to my two kids when they applied to college that they each have 400K in a savings account for undergraduate education, and they will get whatever left in that account, so they have to decide what is important for them, spend almost 95K+/yr for an undergrad degree at an expensive university, or 30K/yr at a in-state public university. My oldest decided to attend Tuft, and he will use up almost 400K for his undergraduate degree there, while his younger brother decided to attend Ohio State University. When they graduate from college, the older brother will have almost nothing in his savings account while the younger brother has almost 300K to start his adult life. That, to me, is fair, because they are old enough to make their own choices.
Anonymous wrote:“Fair” is how much debt they end up with, not how much you had to spend to get them there. I’d consider paying off those loans for your DD if you are able.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s perfectly “fair” if your daughter had a state school option but decided that she’d rather go private knowing in advance that it would require that she take out loans.
14k in loans to go to an Ivy is peanuts when all-in an Ivy bachelor's costs upwards of over 350k. This does not come close to evening the score, it's still highly unfair to the sibling who had to go to state school. You can literally pay off 14k in loans with a Wall Street or tech signing bonus/moving expenses at age 22.
Anonymous wrote:It’s perfectly “fair” if your daughter had a state school option but decided that she’d rather go private knowing in advance that it would require that she take out loans.
each person has different needs