I would not spend the extra money.
In the end, no one cares where your piece of paper comes from, they just want you to have it.
I wouldn't say that I'd like my girls to go to
just any old school, but I do totally agree that it doesn't have to be THE big-name, prestigious school . . . or it's all just trash. I've been saying that for years, and it wasn't too long ago that A BUNCH OF PEOPLE disagreed, saying that the college experience is worth any sacrafice, it's wrong to even consider money in the equation, everyone has debt and this is good debt . . . but in the last two years or so, I think more and more people are becoming less willing to borrow, and that's led to more people thinking the way you and I do.
i have to point out that you could put that money into your own retirement account and be in a better position to support *yourself* in 20 or so years. Remember, they can get grants and loans for college. Retirement is totally on your own dime. I would never short-change my retirement to give my kids the expensive gift of higher learning, especially when they have the opportunity for a nearly free ride.
Why does this a
lways come up when college money is discussed? Personally, I've saved for BOTH my retirement AND my children's college for two decades now, and I don't intend to short-change either one. Sure,
a little more in either account would be welcome, and we'll make careful choices so as to spend our money wisely, but I'm not going to have to eat cat food because I'm going to pay my daughters' tuition.
Minkydog, that isn't really aimmed at you. Just wondering why someone ALWAYS brings up the idea that if you're paying for college you
must have been ignoring retirement. It's like someone asks how to cook chicken, and people pipe up with, "Don't forget the potatoes too!"
Thank you, everyone, for your responses. We have a couple of hours to decide whether to send them to enrollment tomorrow or not.
A new thought just occured to me: You have so little time to make this big decision, and your young sons probably aren't ready to make this choice on the spur of the moment. WHAT IF you go ahead and register them for both colleges and then drop one of them when the tuition's due in August?
I assume there'd be some cost, some fee for dropping out at the last minute, and I don't know how significant that'd be. I know that around here college students all have to "commit" by May 1st, but that really means they have to make a non-refundable housing deposit. Since your boys are looking at local schools, I assume that's not an issue for you.
Normally I'd say that it's time to decide, waivering is useless, avoid fees . . . but you've had SO LITTLE TIME, and I think I'd be willing to take a fee to buy a little more time.