I have benefited greatly from the information I have found on this website. This is the first time that I come to you for advice. I know from reading the posts here that there is a wide range of users on this site who are knowledgeable and possess the wisdom of experience.
I have a 16-year old daughter who is going off to college. She's very talented and full of potential. I would like to give her a chance to go to a reputable college, but the costs scare me. She has a choice between going to UW-Madison or Stanford. Her preference is the latter. After grants/scholarships, we are looking at $15,760 per year at Madison, and $20,000 per year at Stanford, as parent contribution. She can take out a Stafford loan for a maximum of $3500 in her first year, which leaves us with the balance to finance with a parent loan. We make a good income but there is no way we can afford this without making our retirement saving and household cashflow suffer. We have two other children.
I was educated in my home country where costs were really low. I have no experience in navigating the college financial maze here in the US.
I have been informed of the unsubsidized Stafford and Plus loans. We do not qualify for the Perkins or subsidized loans.
I will call on the financial aid offices at the schools to get more information next week. But I also wanted to put this post out there for members who can give me advice. Perhaps even give me advice on what questions to ask for when we talk to the Financial Aid office.
I have heard of many students graduating from college with $80K in loans. I do not wish that burden on my child. If my husband and I shouldered half of the expected contribution, she will still need to borrow $40k throughout 4 years. That in itself seems a lot to me.
I really value the wisdom of groups that I have found in this forum. Please forgive my lack of knowledge in this. My hope is that with your sound advice, you can lay out a good direction for me as to what questions to ask, what to look for, where and what to watch out for, and what to be leery of.
Thank you.
