<p>Market Watch also published this article:</p>
<p>BOSTON (MarketWatch) – With college students only weeks away from the start of classes, many parents are buzzing about, trying to take care of last-minute details.</p>
<p>That’s precisely why my wife Susan – the most patient and understanding woman in America – stopped by my office the other day. Looking to finish chores before our oldest daughter heads off to college, Susan had been approached by friends who wondered whether we were taking advantage of the “tuition insurance” they had been offered.</p>
<p>Since we have been saving for college tuition for years, Susan – like her friends – assumed that some protection for our investment in education would be a good idea.</p>
<p>Looking into tuition insurance, however, was an education of its own, and showed that for most people, this kind of coverage would be the Stupid Investment of the Week, as well as the entire academic year.</p>
<p>Stupid Investment of the Week highlights the conditions and characteristics that make an investment less than ideal for the average consumer, and is written in the hope that spotlighting trouble in one case will make easier to sidestep trouble elsewhere. While obviously not a purchase recommendation, neither is the column intended as an automatic sell signal; someone who has purchased tuition insurance may get some peace of mind from the coverage, even if it’s not particularly sensible or cost-effective.</p>
<p>Unnecessary coverage
From a regulatory standpoint, insurance is not considered an investment, but it qualifies for this column because the buyer of the policy expects a return – protection – in exchange for their outlay of capital.</p>
<p>The premise of tuition insurance is to refund the cost of tuition, fees, room, board and other legitimate education expenses when a full-time college student withdraws from school unexpectedly.</p>
<p>It’s an appealing concept precisely because many families work so hard to save up for college, and because the cost of a semester or a year’s worth of tuition is akin to other big-ticket items that most people protect. Skyrocketing tuition bills and a weak economy – coupled with the many colleges and universities that now partner with insurers to put the idea in front of parents – has made the concept much more widespread and acceptable.</p>
<p>So if college costs as much or more than, say, a new car, and you insure your car, then logically tuition would seem like a good thing to insure too.</p>
<p>The cost, typically, is a few percentage points of the tuition bill for the semesters or years the plan is in place.</p>
<p>At private high schools and prep schools – where many schools require insurance if tuition is not paid all at once – tuition insurance can often make sense because schools have policies of not allowing refunds.</p>