+1 |
+1 DC also has all kinds of meal apps on their phone and gets huge discounts. They also saved money from working in the summer. I have told them to do that since HS. |
| My son set a budget of $150/ month to spend. He is responsible for that money; it comes from summer jobs. He spent about that much the first semester, in part because he spent a bit extra at the beginning for things he decided he needed for college, but were extras in my book. Second semester he has spent less, it seems. But, aside from occasionally asking how his budget is going I leave it to him to figure out. We’ve had a few conversations where I try to be helpful, but not controlling or intrusive. |
1200 for the year. Wow. That is low. |
I assume at this level, you son doesn’t go out to bars and drink. That can cost easily $30-50 per night. |
We give ours about 1000 a semester, but that is in addition to books which are rarely expensive and in addition to necessary clothes such as interview suit. They go to a top well endowed school that has cheap arts on or near campus and huge discounts in the community so they do not need a ton and they can work if they want more |
Thats crazy |
| 700~800, but I make most of it myself with an on-campus job |
This! My college was in a major city though, so everyone liked to go out to restaurants, clubs, etc. I was broke with $100/week. |
Nobody answers a thread like this except people who want to flex on how little they spend. |
How many toiletries can they possibly need? If they need that many, that often, they need a make-under. |
| I paid for books and trips home. With a meal plan, what do they really need? Pizza and laundry money I guess. Give them a few hundred $$ to start and see where it goes to better predict. |
| Less than $1000/semester excluding airfare |
| I honestly don’t know what my DS spends. He has a meal plan, laundry is included. Whatever he spends comes from his account which is from his summer and weekend jobs. I let him order toiletries on my Amazon account. He found a website that has tons of books so get gets most of his books for classes there. |
OP here. Thank you, this has been really useful! My kid will be going to school in DC which is why I asked here. I went to college in a small city that was a 90 minute train ride from a big city, and my parents covered my travel home and all my school-related expenses except books. The idea was that they'd give me a lump sum and I was supposed to shop around for the best deals on books (a major expense 30 years ago) in order to have more leftover for discretionary spending. I had some very tattered textbooks!
So it sounds like with housing, meals, and transportation covered (the fees include an unlimited wmata pass), and with books being mostly online now, $1000-1200 should land right in the middle of "I need to water down my shampoo" and "pizza's on me, everyone!" |