Paying for College, 2019 Edition: Everything You
Need to Maximize Financial Aid and Afford College. By Kalman A. Chany, with
Geoff Martz. Princeton Review/Penguin Random House. $22.99.
This annual guide to college costs, now in
its 27th year, was a lot more fun when it was called Paying for College without Going Broke.
Well, not “fun,” exactly – it was never that – but the former title encapsulated
the knowledge of college-financing consultant Kalman A. Chany that college costs
are a huge strain on the budget of most families and need to be thought through
very carefully so they do not torpedo the rest of a family’s financial life
(including the parents’ retirement). The 2019 edition of what is now simply
called Paying for College contains the
same sort of straightforward advice and assistance as previous editions,
including excellent line-by-line guides through the enormously thorny thicket
of federal forms – notably FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid),
some of whose questions can be answered in various ways that will have
different impacts on student financial assistance. There is similar detailed
advice on handling the CSS PROFILE form – required by many selective colleges
in addition to FAFSA. There are even 2017 versions of IRS forms 1040 and 1040-A
in the back of the book, just to make the whole paying-for-college experience
even less enjoyable.
To be fair, Chany does not want to make college finances
frustrating, difficult, time-consuming and overwhelming, but that is what they
will be for most families. “Almost every family now qualifies for some form of
assistance,” Chany asserts, and while that is a bit of an overstatement and
over-simplification, it is true enough to make it worthwhile to use this book
to find out if your family can indeed get assistance and, if so, how to go
about getting as much as possible. Chany minces no words when it comes to the
way a college financial aid officer (FAO) works: “He will be much more invasive
than the IRS ever is, demanding not just your financial data but intimate
details of your personal life such as medical problems and marital status. …The
college FAOs don’t really want you to understand all the intricacies of the
financial aid process.” Chany’s book is intended to show how parents, once they
do understand the way an FAO operates, can use the rules to their advantage.
Paying
for College is not intended to turn parents into financial-aid experts. Its
objective is to guide families to the circumstances discussed in the book that
most closely resemble theirs, then show them how to use those circumstance as
effectively as possible to maximize aid. Some of Chany’s advice applies to
almost everyone: “If you have any hope of financial aid, never put money in the child’s name” (because colleges insist that lots of the funds held by a child be
used to pay for schooling, far more than the percentage they insist parents
contribute). And some of the information does
apply to everyone: “Colleges now use the tax year two years before college begins…as their basis for
deciding what you can afford to pay during freshman year.”
Much of the material in Paying for College, however, is of the
“it depends” type: its value depends on your family’s specific circumstances.
For example, there are good reasons to file a Form 1040A or 1040EZ if IRS rules
allow you to do so – even if an accountant says it is better to file a
more-standard 1040. If you own a home, federal financial-aid methodology does
not include its value in determining eligibility, nor do calculations at most
state schools, but highly selective private colleges (and even some that are
not as highly selective) do include it. And so on – and on and on. Yes, this
gets extremely complicated, and Chany can simplify it only so far; in fact, the
firm he founded, Campus Consultants, charges nearly $2,000 to help those who
can afford it get through all the ins and outs of college financial aid, and he
would have no business if all the complexity could be learned for $22.99.
Nevertheless, there is a great deal to be gained from Paying for College. Chany includes a chapter on what students
themselves can do while parents wade through all the forms and numbers: take an
SAT review course, take AP classes, plan to transfer to a desired college after
spending two years at a less-expensive one, and more. He provides very helpful
lists, such as one of state agencies that administer college aid and one of the
different types of financial aid (with explanations of the pluses and minuses
of each). And he delves into all sorts of pragmatic issues, such as what to do
if you are divorced, separated or a single parent, and how to file an appeal if
the FAO does not offer enough aid. The bottom line – an apt term to use when
discussing money – is that Paying for
College will not solve every family’s financial concerns and will not
pre-empt the need for at least some families to seek help from Chany’s firm or
a similar one in order to maximize college aid. For many families, though, Paying for College will be a highly
useful guidebook showing what to look for, and what to look out for, when
negotiating the morass of forms and requirements and tax laws and individual
colleges’ quirks – and how to do all this without going broke.
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