Monday November 23, 2009 1:17 AM ET
SmartMoney
A A A
Personal Finance

How Much Should You Save?

Updated on March 10, 2008.

·Click here to see the worksheet below
FIRST, THE BAD NEWS: If you have dreams of sending your newborn child to Harvard, you'll have to raise a small fortune to foot the bill. Now, the good news: Thanks to 529 plans, saving for college is easier than ever. (And, thankfully, most schools don't come with the hefty price tag of the tony Ivy league.) Of course, even with a 529 plan's tax-free savings, you're going to have to come up with a savings plan early — and stick to it for many, many years.

Our worksheet will help you do it. Based on how much you've already saved, the rate you expect your savings to grow and how quickly you expect college costs to rise, we'll tell you how much you should be socking away on a monthly basis. Be warned: The figure may frighten you. But before the panic truly sets in, realize that if you do come up short, there are ways to fill in the gap, like student loans.

This calculator assumes your college-savings fund is invested in a 529 college-savings plan — not a prepaid-tuition plan. (Click here if you don't know the difference.) We believe 529 plans are the best way to save for college, since they offer tax-free withdrawals. This means that while you have to save a staggering amount, it's still significantly less than you'd need to save in a taxable account. Click here to see what we mean.

Worksheet

SmartMoney.com would like to invite you to visit our Variable Annuities Custom Resource Center.
Click here to find out more about this financial product and how it may apply to you.


Follow SmartMoney on Facebook, Twitter & More: Facebook Twitter
Bookmark and Share RSS
Order ReprintsOrder Reprints
User Comments
Posted by: mpasaa
Here's an excellent book on financial aid and awards that I highly recommend and that I've bought.

The College Solution: A Guide for Everyone Looking for the Right School at the Right Price Lynn O'Shaughnessy

Using this book's advice might help you save thousands which might help to lessen the amount you need to save and get the merit awards and grants that will save a ton of $$$$.

Also, this calculator assumes a public school will be cheaper than a private school and that's not necessarily correct. Depends on what schools offer in terms of assistance. Again, this book provides excellent info.

Hope this helps the parents out there...there's even a what to do when section from freshman year to senior in H.S. as well as a handy cheat sheet at the back summarizing the book.

good luck to all of us...we need it when it comes to colleges...they are overpriced for what we obtain and I would guess while college grads earn more than HS grads the v...(Read more of this comment)
Posted by: dkrobert
I agree with RV completely. Also this would be much more usefull if it showed or took into account how much was already being contributed and showed a +/- to reach the goal......like most retirement calc.'s do.
Posted by: rvaldivia
The calculator for how much to save for college would be much more useful if it included a place to enter how much one (the parent/s) expect to contribute annually while the student is in college. That would give one a more realistic figure of what to save.
BackType
Comments From Around the Web
Posted by: FrugalDad on Twitter

Just ran numbers on kids' college funds. According to this calculator, I should be saving $900/month combined. Ouch. http://bit.ly/2hqHd3

Posted by: FrugalDad on Twitter

http://bit.ly/2hqHd3

Advertisements