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Near Term Planning for College Students Oldsmar FL

Many families have done a good job at planning in Oldsmar for their child’s college education, but the recent credit crunch and investment downturn will likely affect even the best plans. Also, if you were depending on financial aid or loans, that also is strewn with potential land mines.

Steven Bove
Lebrigh Life Planners, LLC

(813) 891-9599
804 Charles Blvd.
Oldsmar, FL
Kirk Kinder
Picket Fence Financial

(727) 487-3966
2744 Summerdale Dr. North
Clearwater, FL
Michael Koenig
FirsTrust, LLC

(813) 874-7200
3111 West M. L. King, Jr. Blvd., Suite 100
Tampa, FL
David Nestrick
FirsTrust, LLC

(813) 874-7200
3111 West M. L. King, Jr. Blvd., Suite 100
Tampa, FL
Christopher Cannon
FirsTrust, LLC

(813) 874-7200
3111 West M. L. King, Jr. Blvd., Suite 100
Tampa, FL
David Lough
Lough Investment Advisory, LLC

(727) 725-3336
30345 US Highway 19N, #m
Clearwater, FL
Carl von dem Bussche
Financial Guidance Group, Inc

(727) 787-7526
788 Samantha Drive
Palm Harbor, FL
Daniel Brownsberger
FirsTrust, LLC

(813) 874-7200
3111 West M. L. King, Jr. Blvd., Suite 100
Tampa, FL
David Frisch
Frisch Financial Group, Inc.

(813) 639-7580
2202 N. West Shore Blvd. – Suite 200
Tampa, FL
Elayne Pisarik
FirsTrust, LLC

(813) 874-7200
3111 West M. L. King, Jr. Blvd., Suite 100
Tampa, FL
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Near Term Planning for College Students

Many families have done a good job at planning for their child’s college education, but the recent credit crunch and investment downturn will likely affect even the best plans. Also, if you were depending on financial aid or loans, that also is strewn with potential land mines.

Here are three things you need to consider over the near-term:

1) Financial aid shortfalls: As we all know the cost of college has continued to increase, and colleges have not been able to offer enough funding through the variety of aid programs that include: Perkins, Stafford and Plus federal education loans, and private student loans through banks. This is all due to the current credit crunch.

Be careful – many get in trouble with debt because they are unaware that many for-profit companies advertising access to federal loans get their financing from private sources that cost the borrower far more than actual federal loans would. The ability to plan for college well in advance and work with an expert to sift through proper loan alternatives can make the difference between an affordable debt load when a student graduates and potential bankruptcy.

2) Establish a budget for basic college expenses: Until the student gets to school it will be difficult to know what actual expenses will be, but it won’t hurt to set a tentative budget that involves taking full account of the student’s savings, the parents’ (and possibly the grandparents’) contribution to everyday expenses and any planned income from work-study or other sources. Go here for a template of a budget specifically designed for college students.

3) Getting daily finances in order: The time to start managing credit cards and banking accounts isn’t freshman year it should start before your child goes to college. While a teenager won’t build a credit history as an authorized user on a parent’s card, it’s good to get a little practice using it under a parent’s watchful eye. Many credit card issuers also have specially designed cards with limited credit lines and relaxed approval for college students. See my article on Helping Your Teen Manage Money for more tips on this,

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