cruisnfamily
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- Joined
- Mar 6, 2002
- Messages
- 6,218
I get it now, Thanks!Lisa loves Pooh said:For example--investing $10K up front....the program has 18-22 years for that money to grow and be able to pay the fees at the time of enrollment.
Dividing it into payments of 5 years or 18 years--the entire amount does not have the entire 18-22 years to grow. If you could equally split the up front amount--there would be no way for the money to "grow" to the amount necessary to sustain the program and afford college. So they calculate a value....that allows the purchaser to make payments...while allowing the money the opportunity to grow at that same time.
See, I can't afford the $200+ payments on a monthly basis either but we already have a chunk saved(and I wanted the 55mo amount). So, we'll give them that chunk and then pay them monthly the amount we've been saving monthly which is not $200+. This will pay us even further ahead and when we finally catch up with each other, we won't have many months to pay at $200+(I figured it out I think it will only be 13mos or so for us at that high rate) Once this is paid, we'll go back to saving on our own again in mutual funds, as we're continuing to do for DD12 and hopefully we'll accumulate enough for room and board.or your situation as stated---but I can't decide one month to pay an extra $50--or in another month to pay an extra $10. Once set up...I make stated payments or pay it off.
Anyway, back to the OP's question...I think probably a couple of hundred a month would be the "correct" answer depending on your child's age. However, conventional wisdom is to fully fund retirement first as you can't borrow for retirement and you can borrow for college.

I think they average about $12K a year now. My sister's stepdaughter is starting at a private university next month and it will cost about $35K a year. Yikes!
My sister has six kids to put through college and boy do I feel for her. 