There comes an age in which you start planning a family, and soon after you find yourself buying a house, the next step is to get your kids into some real and efficient education situation, it starts with grade school and will follow you through college, the college question is a serious thing.
College quality is something extremely important, the experiences that young adults go through while in college will shape their personalities and will have a significant effect on their future career and life.
The result of years of improving the financial planning system is the creation of several options to effectively build up the necessary funds to send kids to college.
Perhaps, one of the more popular long term financial planning options is the prepaid-tuition plans. It works like college-savings plans. It works by allowing you to save for college education in a tax-deferred investment. Prepaid-tuition plans are based on the present cost of college education and not the projected cost of college tuition in the time when your kids are due to college. So whether the tuition fee cost is doubled or tripled by the time your kids reach college, you will still pay the present cost of college education. Prepaid-tuition plan is for parents who want to take the game of stocks and bonds. Therefore, prepaid-college plans can be a less risky investment to make.
Another good thing about prepaid-tuition plans is that they are considered at parent’s assets rather than the kids’ money.
But in every financial investment there are expected drawbacks. Most prepaid-tuition plans do not cover other educational expenses such as dorm, lodging, and everyday expenditures. Prepaid-tuition plans also have the possibility of shutting down even before your kids get into college. This will result in losing the money you have invested for a very long time.
Prepaid-tuition plans are currently available in 18 states (Illinois, Pennsylvania, Alabama, Virginia, Nevada, Colorado, Maryland, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, Texas, Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Massachusetts, South Carolina, West Virginia, and Washington). Meanwhile, the state of Alaska offers the prepaid-tuition plans as college savings plan option.
Educational IRA
This investment is a special type of IRA account that is limited for higher educational expenses. For as low as $500 a year, parents or grandparents can start investing for their kids’ college. The money however is registered in the kids’ names. The downside here is the possibility of losing the money since it is invested on several kinds of savings and investment vehicles.