Somreth said he was dissatisfied with the ISA he used to finance his coding boot camp, which totaled about $40,000 in tuition for a five-month engineering immersion program. But he said that if the education he received had resulted in higher earnings that justified the high tuition or if the tuition cost were lower, then he’d feel differently about the ISA:
“So the fact that my boot camp is like $40K—I don’t think that was worth it in terms of the value. I did get some value out of it, but it was not valued at $8,000 a month. That’s kind of insane.”
When asked if he would have preferred to finance his education with a traditional loan instead of an ISA, Somreth explained that both options have their drawbacks and advantages:
“I would feel like, if [the loan I used] was more traditional and it had interest on top of the 40K, I think that would actually be structured a little bit worse than the ISA because at least with the ISA, they do require hard monthly payments, but it depends on where your income bracket’s at. I’m not saying it’s entirely bad. I think if it’s structured in a certain way to actually help the student and be . . . flexible with the repayments, I think that that could be something of value for others in the future.”