Home     Forum     401k     401k Rollovers     Crypto Forum
    Register   Login   Members   Search   FAQs     Recent Posts    



Retirement or College Education?

Reply to topic
Money Talk > Personal Finance

Author Thread
ecrcg
New Poster


Cash: $ 0.50

Posts: 2
Joined: 05 Apr 2007

Retirement or College Education?  Reply with quote  

Any advice gladly appreciated.....My husband and I are trying to determine how to earmark our incomes. We are torn between saving to help our children pay for their college educations (they start in the next few years) and saving our funds for our own retirement. I hate for the kids to start out under all kinds of debt, but I don't want to work until I'm 80 either. Any reliable sources to direct me to balance this Question ??
Post Sat Apr 07, 2007 3:31 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
muneebgs
Member


Cash: $ 2.75

Posts: 12
Joined: 08 Feb 2007

 Reply with quote  

You can not borrow for your retirement, but you can borrower for your education....over 60% of babyboomers believe they should pay for their childrens education, and as a result put themselves into a financial bind as they get closer to retirement age!

Federal student loans (Stafford, PLUS and Consolidation) are there to be a help, not a hinderance. If you need them, use them, but as with everything else, make an informed decision about what you are doing.

My suggestion is to always look for a non-profit lender in your state as your first choice. You can get a list of non-profits in your state at www.efc.org.
Post Tue Apr 10, 2007 4:35 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
No-Brainer
Senior Member


Cash: $ 83.45

Posts: 986
Joined: 29 Dec 2005
Location: Oregon USA
 Reply with quote  

I have helped several of my kids get through college, but I haven't paid for a single one directly. I have also seen too many of their friends that DID get a free ride and what effect it had on them. I know your kids are different, but are they really?

Appreciation for what you're getting is part of the college experience in my opinion and how can you appreciate something that comes so easy? Make them earn it.

Easiest Path to Grow Your Income For Free
Free Crypto Pays Compound Interest DAILY!
Post Wed Apr 11, 2007 1:31 pm
 View user's profile Send private message Visit poster's website
Case-Face
Full Member


Cash: $ 0.35

Posts: 75
Joined: 21 May 2007

 Reply with quote  

Who really wants to HAVE to work until their 80? Not most of us! Fund your retirement, and whatever you can spare give to the kid's college fund. But to be honest, if they're already going to start school in a few years, saving really doesn't matter. Financial aid, scholarships, and inevitable loans will have to fund them. I did all of the previous means and I'm still able to feed and clothe myself, pay the rent/bills, AND pay off my loans. That's just life unless you're wealthy...
Post Thu Jul 19, 2007 3:53 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
more freedom
Full Member


Cash: $ 16.20

Posts: 80
Joined: 12 Jul 2006

 Reply with quote  

What you can do is that you can invest your money wisely, then use your profit from your investment portfolio to pay for your college fees
Post Sat Aug 18, 2007 3:03 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
Fern123
Member


Cash: $ 2.40

Posts: 12
Joined: 28 Jun 2007

 Reply with quote  

Always fund your retirement first.
Post Mon Aug 20, 2007 8:42 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
dstern
Contributing Member


Cash: $ 6.60

Posts: 33
Joined: 18 Aug 2007
Location: UK
 Reply with quote  

Here's a suggestion: why not make a deal with the kids, use the money rather than take out a loan and in return they'll fund your retirement.
Post Fri Sep 14, 2007 10:14 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
Apollo
Senior Member


Cash: $ 73.85

Posts: 360
Joined: 10 Sep 2007
Location: New York
Re: Retirement or College Education?  Reply with quote  

Nobody wants to work until their 80 but you don't want to rely on SS when your retired either.

I would not recommend to take away money which you had planned to save for retirement and to divert it to other sources. You can borrow funds for your kids college education but not for your retirement.

The rest really depends on how much the two of you earn?

Here are a few suggestions (if you are able to execute them financially):

1. Fund your retirement as you have planned. Do some research as there are plenty of ways to safe for your retirement. I would suggest more then just one option (once again it depends on how much money is available)
but your employers 401k is a decent start.

2. If additional funds are available I would open a money market account and put the additional funds in there for your kids college education.

3. One thing you may want to consider is to invest some of your money which you intend for your kids college education. It carrys additional risk but with the right investment strategy and/or advice you would end up with more money then compared to the money market account (this really depends on how much money is available and on your preference).

Avoid the mistake many people make and remember:

Don't take away from your retirement funds now as you won't have them when you really need them.

It is not smart to play it safe but it is safe to play it smart.
Post Sat Sep 15, 2007 3:10 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
efflandt
Senior Member


Cash: $ 80.45

Posts: 401
Joined: 25 Apr 2005
Location: Elgin, IL USA
 Reply with quote  

I am a baby boomer and paid my own way through college, except for portion contributed by an uncle. It may have taken me 5 yrs, but I worked full time the summer I graduated from high school and 2 yrs after that, then part time during school and full time summers. I went to a local university, so no housing expenses.

Of course tuition was less then, and with WI state tuition grant and discount for my sister or brother attending the same university, it only cost me about $700/semester for engineering school. So $1200 earned during summer would just about cover it. When I graduated and started my first full time job, my only debt was $200 borrowed from my dad towards security deposit on an apartment.

If you can contribute towards their education, fine. But there are financial aids available for schooling and sooner or later they need to learn to earn what they spend. They are under no obligation to finance your retirement, so don't short change your retirement to give them a free ride. They should be happy with whatever they get when you pass on.

If you have a surplus during retirement, pass it on early. Better that than running out of money.
Post Sat Sep 15, 2007 9:48 pm
 View user's profile Send private message
oldguy
Senior Member


Cash: $ 751.85

Posts: 3656
Joined: 21 May 2006
Location: arizona
 Reply with quote  

As everyone says - retirement has the priority - the best gift for your kids is to not have to worry about putting their own families on hold to pay for your care when you're 80 or 90.
Get the student loans - then your family will be paying for the college over the 20 year period AFTER graduation rather than during the 4 years of college. The interest is almost nothing, a token %. But the time-value of money is involved, you'll be paying the loan back with cheaper dollars after many years of inflation.
As to who pays, that can be the child after graduation, it can be you, or it can be shared maybe 50/50. But no matter who pays, take advantage of the time factor.
Post Sun Sep 16, 2007 2:46 am
 View user's profile Send private message

Goto page 1, 2  Next
Reply to topic
Forum Jump:
Jump to:  
  Display posts from previous:      


Money Talk © 2003-2022

Crypto Prices