College Savings Calculator
Calculate how much to save for college using a 529 plan. Projects inflation-adjusted tuition costs, monthly savings needed, financial aid offset, and tax benefits. Compare public vs private school costs.
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Total College Cost Needed
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Monthly Savings Needed —
Savings Gap —
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown ▾
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Inflation-Adjusted Total Needed
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Future Value of Current Savings —
Monthly Contribution Needed —
Professional Full parameters & maximum detail ▾
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Cost Projection
Inflation-Adjusted 4-Year Cost —
Net Cost After Aid & Scholarships —
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Savings Plan
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Annual State Tax Savings (529 Deduction) —
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How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your child's age, annual college cost, and current savings for an instant savings target and monthly savings needed.
- Use the 529 Plan tab to model tax-free growth with inflation-adjusted tuition projections.
- Use the Cost Projection tab to see what tuition will cost when your child enrolls.
- Use the Compare Schools tab to compare the 4-year cost of different school types.
- Use the Professional tab for a full analysis including financial aid, scholarships, state 529 deduction savings, and the Roth IRA alternative strategy.
Formula
Inflation-Adjusted Cost = Annual Cost × (1 + Inflation Rate)^Years × 4
Future Value of Savings = Current Savings × (1 + Return Rate)^Years
Monthly Savings = (Goal − FV of Savings) × r / ((1+r)^n − 1)
Future Value of Savings = Current Savings × (1 + Return Rate)^Years
Monthly Savings = (Goal − FV of Savings) × r / ((1+r)^n − 1)
Example
Example: Child age 5, $25,000/year cost, 5% tuition inflation, 7% return, $5,000 saved. In 13 years: projected cost = $209,000. FV of savings = $11,400. Monthly savings needed ≈ $692/month in a 529 plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
- The average annual cost of a 4-year public university is $25,000–$30,000 (tuition + room + board). Private universities average $55,000–$65,000/year. With 5% tuition inflation, a child born today will face costs 2.6x higher by age 18. Starting early with a 529 plan and consistent contributions significantly reduces the monthly savings required.
- A 529 plan is a tax-advantaged savings account for education expenses. Investments grow tax-free and withdrawals for qualified education expenses are also tax-free. Many states offer a state income tax deduction for contributions (e.g., $3,000–$10,000/year). The sooner you start, the more tax-free compounding works in your favor.
- Tuition has historically increased at 4–6% per year, roughly double general inflation. At 5% annual inflation, a $25,000/year college cost today becomes $59,000/year in 17 years (newborn to college). Starting early with a 529 plan allows investment returns to offset much of this inflation.
- Both have advantages. A 529 offers tax-free growth for education with potential state deductions but is restricted to education expenses (with some exceptions). A Roth IRA allows penalty-free withdrawals for education but counts more heavily in financial aid calculations. Our Professional tab models both strategies.
Related Calculators
Sources & References (5) ▾
- SEC — 529 Plan Investor Bulletin — U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
- IRS — 529 Plans: Questions and Answers — Internal Revenue Service
- Federal Student Aid — Saving for College — Federal Student Aid
- FDIC — Saving for Education Resources — Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- CFPB — Paying for College — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau