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Unreal....sadly they will still fill their class.
Hopefully, someone who is better at math than me can answer this question. At this price tag even if you did OMFS would you ever get ahead?
Hopefully, someone who is better at math than me can answer this question. At this price tag even if you did OMFS would you ever get ahead?
As ridiculous as the figure is, curious about the living expenses tag.... isn't 40k excessively high? I feel like you'd have to go out of your way to find a boujee apartment and eat out each day (never lived in NYC)
NYU DS debt is ridiculous. People just do not realize how hard it is to save money over your working lifetime. Trying to save money for all of life's unexpected expenses and pay off this debilitating debt. It's so easy to say I'm going to make OMFS money and pay this off quickly. I see it all the time. People who make alot of money (OMFS) tend to SPEND alot of money. We all do it. I did it. So the answer is? Live like a poor dental student until your debt is paid off? Good luck with that.
The 1st part of my career: spent hundreds of thousand dollars on buying a practice, building a 2nd practice and investing in those practices/real estate. There was literally no money left for saving. Important note: I owed less than 100K for DS debt.
2nd part of my career: spent hundreds of thousands of dollars LIVING LIFE. My family needs. Bigger home. My personal needs. Vacation home. Cars. Vacations with the family. Again ... invested a moderate amount of money (thank God) into a retirement acct. But again ... difficult to save money.
3rd part of my career: semi-retired working 2-4 days per week for a dental corp. Still spending money on daughter's upcoming wedding. Spending more money on wife's ongoing medical bills. Paying for last kid's college expenses. The expenses never end. I am saving more now since I have no debt.
Now add NYU debt monthly debt service to the above. My debt service was essentially nothing and I still had a difficult time saving money.
Point is. Being a dentist is not worth NYU money. I don't care what kind of dentist you become.
NYU et al remind me of all those lenders back in 2007,2008 who would lend money to ANYONE with a heartbeat to buy more house than they could afford. Same situation with NYU.
This is really frustrating to see as I don't think a lot of perspective and current dental students really realize what that are getting themselves into until it is to late. With that said, I am glad that people are trying to spread the word about this ridiculousness.
This was posted awhile back by someone on SDN, but a good article to read(even though it focuses on specialties). Would highly recommend whitecoatinvestor.com to all that don't know about it.
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Debt Dilemmas for Dental Specialists | White Coat Investor
Dental specialists are often worse off than medical specialists due to higher debt & tuition-requiring residencies. One big financial mistake can sink them.www.whitecoatinvestor.com
I also wanted to post ADAs 2018 (not a more recent one) income data for private practice dentists and specialists.
https://www.ada.org/~/media/ADA/Science and Research/HPI/Files/HPIData_SDPI_2018.xlsx?la=en.
I think 538K for OS is a bit high for the average and that source above didn't list its source for that income data. Not saying that it isn't possible of course, but from what I have seen, the averages were about 100K less depending on who they surveyed.
IMO no dental degree is worth that burden of debt.
Will people really pay 700k for a DDS to come out and make 120k?
Well, an oral surgeon with their own practice can afford to put 2k into retirement as well. It's really not that much to the OS in the grand scheme of things and the OS will be on track to have everything you say they will and still make 400k+ a year. Also, @Dr.K124 already covered this and used $1.6m, and worked out the math to be 3mil retirement funds with an extra 130k a year which is way better than 1 mil. He had also used a conservative 6% while you used an aggressive 10%. OMFS blows anything else out of the water on paper.2k a year into a retirement account from just the age of 20-26 compounding at 10%, by retirement age would net 1mil. If well managed, an average earning individual could have a higher net worth over the omfs who spends 20 years and nearly 2mil in total cost (interest included), without having to dedicate a similar amount of hours.
I can't disagree with this enough. Your own entrepreneurial pursuits are going to come with a lot more risks even if you put 80hr/w into it. If everyone who spends 80hr/w on their own business made 400k income, then everyone would be rich. In contrast, once you get into OMFS, it's not a matter of will your net worth ever hit the millions, it's when will it happen. Even if you don't start your own practice and make 300k annually with 700k student debt, you will still pay that off in less than 6 years and start putting more into retirement/stocks. You will likely be way better off than 99% of entrepreneurs who started 8 years earlier than you did.On the other hand, there are many merits to being an omfs and how you can help people, but in this scenario from a strictly money and time/hours perspective, if you were willing to put in the same amount of 80+ hour weeks in dental school/residency training, and instead into a job/your own entrepreneurial pursuits and allow your investments to compound, the heavily debt ridden omfs route would not be the optimal path.
Well, an oral surgeon with their own practice can afford to put 2k into retirement as well. It's really not that much to the OS in the grand scheme of things and the OS will be on track to have everything you say they will and still make 400k+ a year. Also, @Dr.K124 already covered this and used $1.6m, and worked out the math to be 3mil retirement funds with an extra 130k a year which is way better than 1 mil. He had also used a conservative 6% while you used an aggressive 10%. OMFS blows anything else out of the water on paper.
I can't disagree with this enough. Your own entrepreneurial pursuits are going to come with a lot more risks even if you put 80hr/w into it. If everyone who spends 80hr/w on their own business made 400k income, then everyone would be rich. In contrast, once you get into OMFS, it's not a matter of will your net worth ever hit the millions, it's when will it happen. Even if you don't start your own practice and make 300k annually with 700k student debt, you will still pay that off in less than 6 years and start putting more into retirement/stocks. You will likely be way better off than 99% of entrepreneurs who started 8 years earlier than you did.
It's completely pointless arguing about whether or not NYU is worth it for OMFS because NYU by no means guarantees OMFS. Only handful of their students will get it. If anything, their large class size makes it even harder. Do not go to this school justifying doing OMFS to pay off the INSANE amount of debt.
The assumption was never that someone could easily become an OMFS. @Dochopeful13 simply asked if even OMFS would come out ahead, so I did a case study.It is MUCH easier said than done to actually become a OMFS. One should not justify going to such an expensive school in hopes they’ll become a OMFS to pay it off. Does NYU even produce that many OMFS? Please correct me because I thought the Ivies produced the most amount of those per class.
Because what happens if you don’t make it? If you end up as a general Dentist? Now you’re paying almost a million in debt and there’s no way you’ll ever see or enjoy the money you make.
To your first half reply, the point I was trying to draw upon was how important time is regarding compounding interest, the % is not the important value to take away. What we are talking about here is financial literacy, although the raw income is high, you have to consider 1) debt, 2) opportunity cost. Without getting tangential, the opportunity cost of a loss of income and investment opportunity through 4 years undergrad, 4 years dental, 6 years residency, and then a period of 6+ years in which you are servicing debt is very significant, it’s literally a 20 year period, at which point you can then begin to make progress on your net worth.Well, an oral surgeon with their own practice can afford to put 2k into retirement as well. It's really not that much to the OS in the grand scheme of things and the OS will be on track to have everything you say they will and still make 400k+ a year. Also, @Dr.K124 already covered this and used $1.6m, and worked out the math to be 3mil retirement funds with an extra 130k a year which is way better than 1 mil. He had also used a conservative 6% while you used an aggressive 10%. OMFS blows anything else out of the water on paper.
I can't disagree with this enough. Your own entrepreneurial pursuits are going to come with a lot more risks even if you put 80hr/w into it. If everyone who spends 80hr/w on their own business made 400k income, then everyone would be rich. In contrast, once you get into OMFS, it's not a matter of will your net worth ever hit the millions, it's when will it happen. Even if you don't start your own practice and make 300k annually with 700k student debt, you will still pay that off in less than 6 years and start putting more into retirement/stocks. You will likely be way better off than 99% of entrepreneurs who started 8 years earlier than you did.
I'm not sure there will be a definitive number, but once so many dentists are struggling with debt, the word will hopefully get to the pre dents who almost certainly aren't even thinking about finances when they're applying. I'm assuming this will still be years from now.I am just wondering what will be the limit? 1 million? 2 million?
I used to be one of those predents that was completely finance illiterate and I am hoping more predents realize what it truly means to have 400-700k in debt to be an average GP making 120-180k per year.I'm not sure there will be a definitive number, but once so many dentists are struggling with debt, the word will hopefully get to the pre dents who almost certainly aren't even thinking about finances when they're applying. I'm assuming this will still be years from now.
I have a young, bright female patient who is in the process of applying to DS next cycle. I asked her what school she hopes to attend. She told me USC. I asked her if she was aware of the excessive tuition. I even brought it up to her father. But all I saw was her father beaming that his child was going to attend a DS and become a dentist. Now ... let me preface this by stating that I work for a Dental Corp who sees low income patients. Maybe he is affluent. Maybe not. I do not know nor am I going to speculate. But the half a million plus price tag to become a general dentist didn't seem to phase this person or her father. Is her father to be blamed? Well ... that's another discussion.
An above poster mentioned how someone making OMFS money can make the numbers work. But we're talking about being a general dentist.
There is no rationalizing going into this much DS debt to become a dentist. Oh ... they may say they will pay any price to have their dream job. To be a dentist. Lets be real people. Dentistry is hard, stressful work. If you become a practice owner ... then at least all your hard work will be validated. If you are forced to work in the Dental Corp trenches with tons of DS debt. Your life will suck. Endless working hours while chipping away at that huge DS debt.
I mentioned it in another thread. One of the managing dentists I work with is in his late 40's. Wife. kids. Seems happy enough. Graduated from NYU many yrs ago when the tuition was "less" 🙄 . . HE IS STILL PAYING OFF HIS NYU DS DEBT. You should be accumulating wealth in your 40's ... not paying off unsecured debt. He's accepted his fate and is being positive about it. What else can he do? Nothing.
Future happiness is financial freedom. It starts with having the stats or situation (military, scholarships, in-state, etc) to attend a reasonably priced DS. Then dentistry can be rewarding.
When I see predents applying to those expensive schools and hoping to get in and needs to take out loans , it’s just sad to see how every year the class will be filled no matter what.
If you graduate from NYU with 700k and then decide to become an OMFS you have 4-6 more years of tuition to cover, along with accrued interest on the 700k.Yes. I'm a physician, not a dentist, but OMFS makes $538,000 on average according to the 2020 Doximity compensation survey. The maximum debt to income ratio for an optimal lifestyle is 2x. Therefore, so long as you're the average OMFS and your debt is less than $1M you'll be fine.
When I see predents applying to those expensive schools and hoping to get in and needs to take out loans , it’s just sad to see how every year the class will be filled no matter what.
This is why predents shouldn’t risk putting themselves in this situation. Do not apply to NYU, or any similarly priced school for that matter! If you can’t get into a “reasonably” priced school, you might be better off financially rethinking your career plans.But think about it. If NYU was your only option ... what are you going to do? It's easy for us armchair quarterbacks (current dentists, students in cheaper schools, military, etc. etc.) to say don't do it and find another profession.
Ok so I actually took a look at the math and have to say OP's table is incredibly inaccurate. I fiddled around with the living expenses and still couldn't hit OP's 705k even with $2k +a month in living expenses and a $1600 room. Like, you really have to try to hit 705k debt, it's not like you go to NYU, live reasonably, and then suddenly owe 705k. NYU is expensive AF but it's not 705k expensive. If you're spending 2k+ a month as a student, then you are really something else. For reference, I am the live at home category and I am actually getting out for under that amount.
Yea we get it, NYU is expensive even at the low end, hell even if you live at home, but please stop making up random numbers without doing actual research.
In conclusion, expected tuition for students: 550k absolutely, 600k very likely, 650k maybe, 700k no.
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650k maybe, 700k no.
You say OP's off by maybe 50k. That's really not sensationalistic. Saying ECU costs 600k when it costs like 200k would be sensationalistic. The difference between 650k and 700k here is minimal because you're committing financial suicide either way. Also, you waived health insurance on your table for all 4 years. That's another 16k pre interest you could add to the 650k.but can we please use better numbers instead of bad journalistic sensationalism?
First of all, I said that you can expect to pay 580k versus expected to pay 705k. Why did you focus on my high end 650k instead of the middle ground of 610k or even the expected minimum of 580k?You say OP's off by maybe 50k. That's really not sensationalistic. Saying ECU costs 600k when it costs like 200k would be sensationalistic. The difference between 650k and 700k here is minimal because you're committing financial suicide either way. Also, you waived health insurance on your table for all 4 years. That's another 16k pre interest you could add to the 650k.
First of all, I said that you can expect to pay 580k versus expected to pay 705k. Why did you focus on my high end 650k instead of the middle ground of 610k or even the expected minimum of 580k?
The sensationalistic part isn't the tuition, which would cost 400k pre-interest, because that's pretty concrete. The sensationalistic part is saying that a student needs to have $2k a month to live AFTER rent to live in NYC. The estimates for living expenses and tuition inflation are 33% higher than what it really should be. Like I said, we all know NYU is expensive and I'm all for ****ting on it but there's no need to artificially inflate any part of the expected costs to try and prove a point. The actual expected costs already does that.
OK? I never argued against that point, but there is a big difference between using more accurate numbers like 580k and 705k. I would have said that again if it was for any other school like ~400k buffalo but someone makes a post titled "EXPECT 470k TUITION FOR BUFFALO." The fact that you all have to use pretty poor math to prove a point takes away from that point itself, which was my point to begin with and said multiple times. Don't need to use badly derived 705k to scare predents. Use an actual estimation and that should do the job.I think the main point is 705k vs 580k vs 610k doesn’t really matter a general dentist will not be able to pay any of those off. You will be in severe debt with any of those amounts. Plus you waived health insurance and didn’t include interest which completely solidifies that unless someone is paying for you to attend the school you will be in an astronomical amount of debt. So you’re kind of preaching on deaf ears with the argument.
But you didn't reference the source. The math was done by student loan planner, and you posted up a picture of it that references NYU. How many times have they posted an article with crappy math just to get people to use their services? And if it really doesn't matter, then we should have no problem using more appropriate estimations.lol. The number doesn't really matter. After certain amount, it's financial suicide regardless. Plus, if you want to complain about the numbers not being accurate, do it to the "source". I clearly referenced the source. My message is pretty clear, in fact, trying to intimidate predents. Predents should really think when they sign the loan contract what it truly means to have very high debt with compound interest. Does it matter if you have 500k or 600k debt? My message is, you are pretty f****ed regardless if you don't have plan to get out of it.
I’m stuck. Hoping others don’t follow my footsteps500k+ student debt is going to be a lifelong shackle...