How much do you save for your kids' college?

We put $50 a month in for the first child until daycare kicked in for both ($17,500/yr for the two). Once they were out of daycare, we began with that $50 again. We are now up to $150/week per child with two kids 11 & 9 (so $300/wk and $15,600/yr). We feel like we need to catch up. So almost socking away the full daycare cost we used to have and feel like we aren't doing enough. We figure if they can get some help and only have to pay around $35K a year, we have worked out a cash flow plan to supplement what we will have saved by then and get them through debt free. If we need to add in a little then, we should be able to. Wish we could have just continued saving during those daycare years but we had also moved into a much larger and more expensive house and there was no more room to save at the time. It is always a juggling act! :coffee:
 
Our son has an inheritance left to him by his grandmother and he can't touch it until he is 18, so he will use that for college. It is more than enough to cover 4 yr of college so we don't have to worry about college expenses.
 
We do $50 a month per kid. It was nothing for a year or two when daycare was at it's highest when the youngest was in the toddler room.

However tuition is much lower in Canada compared to the U.S. plus it's unlikely they will move out to go to school. Unless you're a farm kid or from a very rural area it's not common to go away to school here. Most everyone I know lived at home and worked pt to help pay for costs which is what my kids will do.

If they go on to graduate school that would be a different story I guess. But based on their current grades I'm not too concerned about that. :rotfl2:

I also work for a post secondary institute where there are scholarships available for the employees' kids. However there are quite a few restrictions so it may not amount to much depending on how many apply, GPA, etc.

One year of undergrad would be around $4000-$5000 plus books. We probably match the kids 50%/50% or something along that line.
 
Its enough for a freshman year....at a perfectly fine local university. I have my JD and hubby has his MD from there. We did not have any contribution from the families and we will be paying back loans despite the scholarships for 20 years (significantly inflated because DH was a juvenile diabetic and was/is insulin dependent. That insulin is expensive..but it keeps him alive. He had no insurance coverage for those years.)

Maybe its the cynical folks I work with, but, I don't believe its my responsibility to pay for my kids entire secondary education. But, I will happily help them out if I can. My final thought...if they put the work in, I will help them equally as long as they try.

I understand that not everyone feels the need to pay for a college education for their children. It is, however, important to understand that college education lending has changed a lot in recent years. Unless you are very low income, your children will most likely only be offered unsubsidized loans with fairly high interest rates. The unsubsidized Stafford loan is currently at 6.9 percent interest and the interest begins to accrue as soon as your children receive the money. Your children will not be able to borrow 10k per year on an unsubsidized Stafford loan. Whatever money your children need above the unsubsidized Stafford loan will most likely be offered in the form of Parent Plus loans which also begin to accrue interest as soon as your children recieve the money AND you as a parent have to co-sign for the loans. All of this may be fine with you but I don't think a lot of us had the same kind of experience with loans as what they are offering students now. Your children will graduate owing more than they borrowed and you will be on the hook for some of what they borrowed as co-signers.
 

Exactly my point. Cashflow will obviously only work if you have some disposable income. Every family chooses to spend their disposable income differently.
Yeah, I understand what you mean: I always laugh at the "how to save money advice" that tells me to cut out lattes, stop smoking, drink less, and skip restaurant meals. I have literally never had a latte, have literally never smoked a single cigarette, spend about $25/year on alcohol, and eat out about twice a month. I cannot save significant money with those oft-touted "just use your disposable income" methods because I'm already not spending on those things.

I'm sure that some families genuinely have no disposable income, but most people have it and are spending it rather than using it for college savings. Fine -- that's their choice, but it's unfair of them to say today, "Family vacations are a top priority for us" . . . then whine later about lack of savings.
Yeah, but I've found that my costs have never really gone down from when we were paying a lot for daycare. Daycare costs were replaced by violin lessons, regional orchestra tuition, etc., more expensive clothing, more for food, etc. Yes, you dont' have as much of those expenses once the kid is in college, but for all those years leading up, when you'd like to be saving, there isn't so much left to save, so the snowball ends up being pretty small.
In my experience, our kids were expensive from birth to age 3 -- then we had 5-7 years when daycare was less expensive (3s and 4s are much less expensive than labor intensive newborns and one-year olds) and they weren't into afterschool activities yet. We saved like crazy in those years. When they hit middle school, our costs went up again: They started wearing adult-sized clothing, which is harder to find used. They needed braces. Then the cost of driving and teen activities hit us in high school. But we definitely had some year in the middle when it was easier to save.

Also, by the time our kids were in elementary school, we were both earning more than we did when they were newborns -- yet we saved more rather than "up" our lifestyle.
You can do more from cash flow than you think! I think too many people think "I can't save that much money" and just end up taking out much larger loans than necessary because they didn't try.
I think you're exactly right. People think it's an all-or-nothing proposition: If you can't manage to save the whole thing, just forget it. If you're going to have to borrow, why not just borrow the whole thing.

The reality is that if you can only manage to save a small amount, it can at least cut down on borrowing, which can make a big difference in the final payoff.
Hahhaahaha! :)

We all managed with help or without help..... Our kids will too!
Yes, I did manage on my own, but at times I lived in places that genuinely weren't safe, sometimes my feet got wet because I had holes in the soles of my only tennis shoes, fairly often I was hungry, I shared some books or used other can't-afford-books-measures . . . the list could go on. I don't feel the need to coddle my kids in luxury during college, but I do want them to be more comfortable and safer than I was.

Also, college costs have increased to the point that doing it all on your own isn't nearly so possible as it used to be. That's just math.
Wish we could have just continued saving during those daycare years but we had also moved into a much larger and more expensive house and there was no more room to save at the time. It is always a juggling act! :coffee:
That's exactly why we chose to stay in "less house" than most of our friends have -- college was more important to us.
 
However tuition is much lower in Canada compared to the U.S. plus it's unlikely they will move out to go to school. Unless you're a farm kid or from a very rural area it's not common to go away to school here. Most everyone I know lived at home and worked pt to help pay for costs which is what my kids will do.

Interesting, must really depend on where in Canada you are. I'm in Canada as well and a large percentage of the people that I know went away to school, me included. The people I knew at university were mainly from within the province, but there were people from all provinces. I live in a major city with a major university, so I don't fall into the category of farm kid or very rural area. I do agree that tuition is much less here than in the US.
 
disykat;45852260 My point is said:
Just wanted to offer some support to the cash flow premise. This is a part of our plan. DH and I plan to drop back to living on one income when DD16 hits college. We will take whatever we need from savings but we always try to absorb expenses with cash flow first.

For instance, DH was diagnosed with cancer in March. The treatment was going to include a 6 week stay 400 miles from home and a stem cell transplant. Even with insurance, we immediately knew that our out of pocket expenses would be huge. We didn't want to deplete savings unless absolutely necessary with college on the horizon so we went into super budget mode to cash flow as much as possible. We canceled our planned Summer vacation to Europe so that money was available and we cut every possible budget category. He had the transplant and has been back at work for almost 2 months. We were able to cash flow the expenses.

We plan to do the same when DD hits college. We'll cut to super budget mode. Vacations will be nearer home, and savings will be used only after cash flow.

I agree don't under estimate the power of disposable income.
 














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