Anonymous wrote:It's kind of maddening when you are full pay at colleges and your kid's roommates get substantial aid and live much nicer lives than your DC kids do.
I have 2 in college and we are full pay all around with a DC income of $400K. My kids' middle America roommates are both (fr and soph) on 50%+ aid but have cars on campus, much fancier clothing, have all sorts of spending money for eating off campus. My kids have never owned a car, eat in the dining hall full time, etc.
There is something to be said for living in a LCOL area and making under $200K. You go to college for free or at half cost but still have the same lifestyle outside of school as those of us making almost twice the income in a HCOL town.
Anonymous wrote:So I started checking the net price calculators. We are both feds and have been for 20-plus years, with plenty of promotions. Own our little rowhouse. Almost paid off. 20 years of TSP. 2 kids, strictly DCPS. Old car, limited spending, lots of savings. No medical bills.
We’re gonna be at max for ability to pay even though we aren’t living in champagne and caviar. Right?
I just need to count my blessings right? We’ve had stability and ability to pay even if we aren’t living high on the hog. People with more precarious lives deserve the lower price. Right?
I guess merit aid is possible - first kid did great on PSAT. But we’re still likely to just pay full freight even then because if he applies to a reach school EA or ED we’ll say yes, right?
Anonymous wrote:There is a segment of the population that forgets all their otherwise solid financial habits when it comes to their kids attending college.
Don’t spend beyond your means.
If you get financial aid, awesome. If your kid gets merit, awesome. If you’re stuck, like us, at full pay, make the rational financial choice according to your ability. Your kid will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's kind of maddening when you are full pay at colleges and your kid's roommates get substantial aid and live much nicer lives than your DC kids do.
I have 2 in college and we are full pay all around with a DC income of $400K. My kids' middle America roommates are both (fr and soph) on 50%+ aid but have cars on campus, much fancier clothing, have all sorts of spending money for eating off campus. My kids have never owned a car, eat in the dining hall full time, etc.
There is something to be said for living in a LCOL area and making under $200K. You go to college for free or at half cost but still have the same lifestyle outside of school as those of us making almost twice the income in a HCOL town.
Yea you've been on here complaining before. But the truth is, you know nothing about your kids' roommates except what your kids tell you, and your kids sound petty and nasty.
Anonymous wrote:The political capitalist system is set up to get us peasants fighting with each other so we ignore the insane grift that’s happened around rising tuition and student loan programs.
Just like it wants working class people to hate on immigrants and welfare recipients.
The donut hole families are realizing their full pay tuition bill is subsidizing able-bodied parents who choose to stay at home when their kids are self sufficient teenagers. It’s not really the fault of those SAHMs, but the donut holers need some outlet for their frustration because costs are so out of line with the economy.
We’re told not to complain that we can’t afford to send our kids to places our parents were able to afford, like BC. Meanwhile, there’s a kid whining on Reddit right now that they were matched to Boston College on Questbridge and not Harvard.
The system will make you crazy.
Anonymous wrote:It's kind of maddening when you are full pay at colleges and your kid's roommates get substantial aid and live much nicer lives than your DC kids do.
I have 2 in college and we are full pay all around with a DC income of $400K. My kids' middle America roommates are both (fr and soph) on 50%+ aid but have cars on campus, much fancier clothing, have all sorts of spending money for eating off campus. My kids have never owned a car, eat in the dining hall full time, etc.
There is something to be said for living in a LCOL area and making under $200K. You go to college for free or at half cost but still have the same lifestyle outside of school as those of us making almost twice the income in a HCOL town.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a foreigner who came to this country 20 years ago, got married and had kids. Even I knew to do my research, land in a state that has a decent flagship and OK-ish other colleges at a "reasonable price" (what passes for reasonable), and emphasize academics so my kids could be competitive for merit aid elsewhere.
I apologize for my nasty tone, but I'm angry on your wallet's behalf. Why would you continue to live in the district and do this to your own finances? It's self-sabotage, and I don't get the middle class families who do this. The working poor can't afford to move out of DC. The middle class cannot afford NOT to move out of DC. Because of college costs. DCPS is such a lower performing system compared to MCPS or FCPS anyway, so apart from a very short commute, you weren't doing your family any favors...
But OK, it's no use crying over spilt milk. Is it too late to move for kid#2?
Anonymous wrote:So I started checking the net price calculators. We are both feds and have been for 20-plus years, with plenty of promotions. Own our little rowhouse. Almost paid off. 20 years of TSP. 2 kids, strictly DCPS. Old car, limited spending, lots of savings. No medical bills.
We’re gonna be at max for ability to pay even though we aren’t living in champagne and caviar. Right?
I just need to count my blessings right? We’ve had stability and ability to pay even if we aren’t living high on the hog. People with more precarious lives deserve the lower price. Right?
I guess merit aid is possible - first kid did great on PSAT. But we’re still likely to just pay full freight even then because if he applies to a reach school EA or ED we’ll say yes, right?
Anonymous wrote:What's your HHI?
Anonymous wrote:There is a segment of the population that forgets all their otherwise solid financial habits when it comes to their kids attending college.
Don’t spend beyond your means.
If you get financial aid, awesome. If your kid gets merit, awesome. If you’re stuck, like us, at full pay, make the rational financial choice according to your ability. Your kid will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Poor people bad, my life sucks because I'm rich, why does everyone hate me???