Millennials Would Rather Save For Their Kids' College Education Than Save For Their Own Retirement

With an average of $9,100 in student debt, according to TD Ameritrade surveys, millennial parents are all too aware of the financial realities of higher education.

About one-third expect to still have loan payments when their children leave for college, and they don’t want their children to inherit similarly poor financial fortunes. For this reason, 90 percent said they plan to pay at least part of their children’s college fees, and 19 percent said education is a top financial priority.

Already, millennial parents are putting an average of $310 aside per month for the next generation’s schooling, while grandparents contribute an additional $205 monthly.

The Retirement Trade-Off

The education emphasis has hijacked family budgets at the expense of late-life planning. Emergency savings rank second in millennial priority, while retirement funds rest third.

As parents put their children’s futures above their own, the priority may be noble, but it isn’t necessarily advisable.

“These millennials are clearly juggling many things. They are spending somewhere around $230,000 just for the first 18 years of raising one child, and then add to that buying their first home, paying down their own college debt,” Dara Luber, retirement and investing expert at TD Ameritrade, told Benzinga. “They clearly have a lot of priorities, but saving for retirement should be top, first and foremost, and then saving for college. While it is encouraging to see that they are saving for college, they need to make sure that they budget accordingly.”

Millennial parents are acting with the next generation in mind, but the specifics of their plan may backfire. Neglecting their own retirement accounts could actually prove detrimental to the very children they’re working to empower.

“I think it’s important that parents not be a burden for their kids when they are ready for retirement, so preparing themselves for their own retirement, they are putting themselves first,” Luber said.

Habit Or Nearsightedness?

The education priority is not necessarily a symptom of poor financial literacy but rather general myopia. Millennial parents see that education is a more immediate need than retirement, but they don’t realize that, in the scheme of things, it may be less important.

“I think that millennials are still paying down their own student debt, and by having that debt, they’re recognizing that college is expensive, and they’re seeing that in their children’s future and they maybe aren’t seeing retirement [or see it] maybe a little bit further out for them, so that’s how they’re creating those priorities,” Luber said. “So they recognize the importance of saving for college, and while they likely recognize the importance of saving for retirement, they’re looking at what’s coming first.”