Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$250K families are getting merit aid at T30? Since when?
I am OP and I ran a few calculators and you can get a lot of aid at Harvard and Princeton. The cost gets pretty close to UMD (we are in MD).
I got almost zero aid at, for example Carnegie Mellon. Since there are a lot of schools and we are still some year out of applying, I am looking for leads on other top schools where aid is available.
Nice. You must not have a lot of assets outside of retirement/primary residence.. We are in the same income neighborhood and noticed that once you cross the $1.5-$2M threshold for assets, there's zero merit at top schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Income is weighted far greater in the equation.
Go to the Harvard NPC page. Enter $0 for income. Notice if the difference in NPC changes when assets are $0, $500K, $1M, $1.5M, and $2M.
Well, of course 1 mil in assets matters, but assets and income are not weighted comparably. Income factors far more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I love people where Dad is over 59.5 and they have five million in 401K and claim no assets. That 401K money can be pulled penalty free.
401k is for retirement. I believe this is classified as a "hardship" withdrawal and must demonstrate no other way to pay for education. No penalty but you have to pay income taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Income is weighted far greater in the equation.
Go to the Harvard NPC page. Enter $0 for income. Notice if the difference in NPC changes when assets are $0, $500K, $1M, $1.5M, and $2M.
Well, of course 1 mil in assets matters, but assets and income are not weighted comparably. Income factors far more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Income is weighted far greater in the equation.
Go to the Harvard NPC page. Enter $0 for income. Notice if the difference in NPC changes when assets are $0, $500K, $1M, $1.5M, and $2M.
Anonymous wrote:And I love people where Dad is over 59.5 and they have five million in 401K and claim no assets. That 401K money can be pulled penalty free.
Anonymous wrote:Income is weighted far greater in the equation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$250K families are getting merit aid at T30? Since when?
I am OP and I ran a few calculators and you can get a lot of aid at Harvard and Princeton. The cost gets pretty close to UMD (we are in MD).
I got almost zero aid at, for example Carnegie Mellon. Since there are a lot of schools and we are still some year out of applying, I am looking for leads on other top schools where aid is available.
I ran the NPC for CMU, and it came back at FEC $100K per year. Our HHI was about $300K at the time.
Guessing you have more than $400 of assets (not including retirement and primary residence)?
We had a total of $200K in two 529s, one for another child, and cash savings of $200K *at the time*.
But CMU is like $80K/yr, and we have another DC right behind to pay for college.
two kids at $80K/year * 4 yrs = $640K.
But the NPC doesn't care about that. I'm not saying it's unfair. I'm just saying those colleges don't give out much aid to people in our income bracket.
Assets matter just as much as income, if not more.
Ding ding ding! I know this, I feel like the colleges should be clearer about this, because it seems like there's a lot of misperceptions happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$250K families are getting merit aid at T30? Since when?
I am OP and I ran a few calculators and you can get a lot of aid at Harvard and Princeton. The cost gets pretty close to UMD (we are in MD).
I got almost zero aid at, for example Carnegie Mellon. Since there are a lot of schools and we are still some year out of applying, I am looking for leads on other top schools where aid is available.
I ran the NPC for CMU, and it came back at FEC $100K per year. Our HHI was about $300K at the time.
Guessing you have more than $400 of assets (not including retirement and primary residence)?
We had a total of $200K in two 529s, one for another child, and cash savings of $200K *at the time*.
But CMU is like $80K/yr, and we have another DC right behind to pay for college.
two kids at $80K/year * 4 yrs = $640K.
But the NPC doesn't care about that. I'm not saying it's unfair. I'm just saying those colleges don't give out much aid to people in our income bracket.
Assets matter just as much as income, if not more.
Ding ding ding! I know this, I feel like the colleges should be clearer about this, because it seems like there's a lot of misperceptions happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:$250K families are getting merit aid at T30? Since when?
I am OP and I ran a few calculators and you can get a lot of aid at Harvard and Princeton. The cost gets pretty close to UMD (we are in MD).
I got almost zero aid at, for example Carnegie Mellon. Since there are a lot of schools and we are still some year out of applying, I am looking for leads on other top schools where aid is available.
I ran the NPC for CMU, and it came back at FEC $100K per year. Our HHI was about $300K at the time.
Guessing you have more than $400 of assets (not including retirement and primary residence)?
We had a total of $200K in two 529s, one for another child, and cash savings of $200K *at the time*.
But CMU is like $80K/yr, and we have another DC right behind to pay for college.
two kids at $80K/year * 4 yrs = $640K.
But the NPC doesn't care about that. I'm not saying it's unfair. I'm just saying those colleges don't give out much aid to people in our income bracket.
Assets matter just as much as income, if not more.