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    Home»Passive Income»Tyler West On Saving For College, Picking The Right School, And Avoiding The Student Loan Trap
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    Tyler West On Saving For College, Picking The Right School, And Avoiding The Student Loan Trap

    administraciónBy administraciónMay 18, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Tyler West on The College Investor Podcast
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    Tyler West on The College Investor Podcast

    Financial planner and former college admissions consultant Tyler West joins The College Investor Audio Show at MilMoneyCon to talk about how families should actually approach paying for college — from 529 plans to commuter schools to the conversations parents aren’t having with their kids.

    Recorded live at MilMoneyCon, Robert Farrington sits down with Tyler West, an associate financial planner at CL Sheldon & Company who works with military and veteran families. Before financial planning, Tyler served in the Army, worked in higher ed at the University of Colorado, and ran his own college planning business advising high-net-worth families on admissions and financial aid.

    His central message: families spend too much energy optimizing the savings vehicle and not enough on the conversation that actually determines whether the money is well spent.

    Episode Summary

    • Why the 529 plan isn’t the automatic right answer for every family
    • The “donut hole” problem facing middle-class families who don’t qualify for need-based aid
    • Why completion rate matters more than prestige (only 49% of students who start a four-year degree ever finish one)
    • How to use the reach/match/safety framework on both admissions and affordability
    • Why Parent PLUS loans can quietly destroy families
    • The graduate school loan caps taking effect July 1 — and why grad school is where the real debt damage happens

    Start With The Conversation, Not The Account

    Tyler’s pushback on the standard financial planner playbook: most families default to opening a 529 plan and contributing “an appropriate amount” without ever discussing what the kid actually wants to do. His advice is to start career conversations early (at the dinner table, with family and friends in different professions) because most high schoolers can only name between six and 12 careers, and they tend to pick what their parents do.

    The 529 Plan Trade-Off

    The 529 plan is a fine tool, but Tyler warns families to weigh the state tax deduction against the flexibility cost. Investment options are limited, and not every state’s rules align with federal rules — California, for example, doesn’t recognize the 529-to-Roth IRA rollover, so a rollover triggers state tax plus a penalty.

    For high-income families, the financial aid math also matters less than they think: once you cross a certain income and asset threshold, you’re paying sticker price regardless of what account you used.

    Reach, Match, Safety (On The Price Too)

    Tyler recommends families build an admissions safety and a financial safety. Commuting, in-state public schools, and dual enrollment to graduate early (or with two degrees) are underrated cost-cutters. Sticker price isn’t real for most families, but it is real for the upper-middle “donut hole” that misses both Pell Grants and need-based aid.

    Student Loan Rule

    Tyler’s hard rule: never borrow more than the student’s expected first-year salary. The bigger danger is Parent PLUS — there’s no legal obligation for the child to pay it back, and it can pull from parents’ prime compounding years to subsidize a degree the family couldn’t otherwise afford.

    Bottom Line

    The savings vehicle matters less than the conversation. Sit down with your kid, figure out what they actually want to do, and let the financial plan follow from there.

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    The post Tyler West On Saving For College, Picking The Right School, And Avoiding The Student Loan Trap appeared first on The College Investor.

    Avoiding College Loan Picking Saving School Student Trap Tyler West
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    When cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov stepped out of his Soyuz capsule in March 1995 after 437 consecutive days aboard Mir, doctors recorded him at several centimetres above his pre-flight height, and his spine had become so unaccustomed to gravity that the recovery team carried him to a chair rather than risk the compression of letting him walk.

    June 5, 2026

    When Bell Labs engineer Karl Jansky pointed a rotating antenna at the sky in 1932 looking for sources of transatlantic radio static, he kept picking up a faint hiss that peaked every 23 hours and 56 minutes, and he eventually realized he had become the first human to hear the center of the Milky Way.

    June 5, 2026

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    How to Use Bad Housing Data to Negotiate a Lower Price

    June 5, 2026

    When cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov stepped out of his Soyuz capsule in March 1995 after 437 consecutive days aboard Mir, doctors recorded him at several centimetres above his pre-flight height, and his spine had become so unaccustomed to gravity that the recovery team carried him to a chair rather than risk the compression of letting him walk.

    June 5, 2026

    When Bell Labs engineer Karl Jansky pointed a rotating antenna at the sky in 1932 looking for sources of transatlantic radio static, he kept picking up a faint hiss that peaked every 23 hours and 56 minutes, and he eventually realized he had become the first human to hear the center of the Milky Way.

    June 5, 2026
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