06/09/2026
Your kid is three years old and already $300,000 in debt.
Not literally. But if tuition keeps rising the way it has (32% above inflation since 2006), that's where a four-year degree could land by the time they're heading to campus.
So where should you actually be putting money?
On the latest Millennial Money Matters, Turner and I break down the cost of college, the shift to trade schools, how to plan for college and four main college savings accounts:
š±š®šµ š£š¹š®š»: Still the go-to. Tax-free growth, state tax deduction if you use your home state's plan, and a new rule lets you roll up to $35,000 into a Roth IRA if your kid doesn't go.
š§šæššŗš½ šš°š°š¼šš»š: Brand new, goes live July 5th. Kids born between 2025-2028 get a free $1,000 from the government. It's not more tax efficient than a 529, but free money is free money.
šØš§š š šš°š°š¼šš»š: Most flexible of the group. No restrictions on what the money is used for. Good for layering in as your kid gets closer to college age, but it does become the kid's account at age 21.
š¬š¼ššæ š¼šš» š¶š»šš²šššŗš²š»š š®š°š°š¼šš»š: Zero tax benefit, but total flexibility. More useful than people think.
We may be seeing a paradigm shift in college moving forward so building in flexibility will be key here.
Full episode linked below. Worth a listen if you have kids and a mild panic about tuition costs.
What account are you using for college savings?
https://youtu.be/w9ZY_n2xmkU