Anonymous wrote:OP you could also talk to your husband about him giving you the amount needed. If you have a prenup, offer to reduce the amount by what is spent on college. If he has a will, ask to have it amended to subtract the amount for college from what you would inherit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:she was a teen already when her parents remarried,
OP clarified that they've been married since this kid was 12. So, OP has had 5 years to save for college while probably not paying for housing etc . . . , and the step father has had 5 years to form a relationship with this child, and the kid has been watching this enormously uneven treatment since she was too young to make any sense of it.
Anonymous wrote:OK OP. You obviously think your daughter should be grateful for ponying up 1 year in a mid-tier state school. Do you understand that from her perspective the $90K in loans from MD isn’t appreciably different than the $300K from Vassar? They’re both going to cripple her financially for most of her young adulthood. You are not offering her a choice between debt free college and student loans at a private school, you’re offering her the choice of a lot of debt at a school she doesn’t want to attend or a LOT of debt at a school she does.
And, as others have pointed out, if you had held off marrying your rich second husband she would very likely be going to either school debt free.
So how should you talk to her about it? Well, when it comes to
Decisions she will make that will affect your life, how do you want her to approach it? Yeah I’ll pony up for one year in a mid-range state assisted living facility and then mom can go to whatever hell hole medicaid will fund because I’m still making payments on my college debts?
Anonymous wrote:she was a teen already when her parents remarried,