I graduated undergrad with 17K in loans, and grad school with another 93K in loans (that's with a 75% scholarship too). That's 110K total. What they don't tell you is that with interest on a 30 year repayment plan, it comes up to being like $200,000. Payments are about 815 per month.
It's a total bitch. You gotta weigh out how much of an increase in salary you can expect v. how much you'll be paying in loans until you're about 55-60.
Then again, I live in Pittsburgh. I'm pretty sure if I went out west my paycheck would double and paying loans wouldn't be much of an issue.
I totally 100% advise you get an education, and NYU is a hell of a good school. Just be careful about it. Live like you're poor over the next 4 years or you'll be paying for it for the rest of your life. I took out all these loans to go to Amsterdam multiple times thinking I'd just pay it back when I got a job.
Then the economy crashed and now I work at a job where I hear the words "single wide" and "double wide" on almost a daily basis.
It's a total bitch. You gotta weigh out how much of an increase in salary you can expect v. how much you'll be paying in loans until you're about 55-60.
Then again, I live in Pittsburgh. I'm pretty sure if I went out west my paycheck would double and paying loans wouldn't be much of an issue.
I totally 100% advise you get an education, and NYU is a hell of a good school. Just be careful about it. Live like you're poor over the next 4 years or you'll be paying for it for the rest of your life. I took out all these loans to go to Amsterdam multiple times thinking I'd just pay it back when I got a job.
Then the economy crashed and now I work at a job where I hear the words "single wide" and "double wide" on almost a daily basis.