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Guide for Parents of Young Children
As a parent of a newborn or young child, you are probably focusing on
health and nutrition, childproofing your home, finding a good
babysitter, and other joys of parenting, and not
college. Nevertheless, there are a few college planning tips worth
considering even at such an early age.
If you save $100 per month from birth and earn a 4% annual return on
investment, by the time your child matriculates in college you will
have saved $29,246.57. Approximately 30% of your savings will
come from interest. If you wait until the child enters high school to
start saving, then you will need to save $561 a month to reach the
same goal, and only 8% of your savings will come from interest.
If you start saving sooner rather than later, you can also use more
aggressive investments, such as stocks and mutual funds, at the
beginning, because you have more time to recover from mistakes. As
college approaches, you should gradually shift the investments into
more conservative investments.
Money should be saved in the parent's name or in a Section 529 College
Savings Plan account controlled by the parent. Although there are tax
advantages to saving in the child's name, these tax savings are wiped
out by the loss in eligibility for need-based student aid.
Do not be overwhelmed by the high cost of a college education. You do
not need to save the full amount. Instead, FinAid recommends saving
one-third to one-half the costs and $100 to $250 a month per child. But
any amount is better than nothing, and it is more important to
start saving regularly. Once you get into the habit of saving, it will
be easier to increase the amount you save.
Encourage family and friends, especially grandparents, to contribute
to the child's college fund.
Other good tips include making the saving automatic (i.e., set up an
automatic monthly transfer from your checking account to a saving
account or college savings plan) and depositing a portion of windfalls
(e.g., income tax refunds) into the savings account.
For these and similar tips, see FinAid's
Saving for College
section.
For good resources on parenting in general, see the following web sites:
parenting.com,
parents.com,
parentsplace.com,
parenthoodweb.com,
familyeducation.com,
and
seasameworkshop.org/parents.
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