
Anonymous wrote:It has been a slow ramp up. In HS, they paid for social activities. In college, they are responsible for everything that is not tuition, fees and R&B- but they get some things for Christmas and birthdays (eg clothing). Our oldest is a sophomore, and he will get a hand me down car this summer for his summer internship- we will pay for the insurance- but he will do the rest as well as pay for his living expenses over the summer during the length of the full time part of the internship (it goes to 12 hours a week during the school year). He is still on our phone plan- I don't know when that will end. He plans on living on campus again next year, but senior year when he moves off- he will pay for a few more things (we will probably give him what we would have paid on campus and he can budget it out over the year). By the time he graduates, he should be on his own.
His brother is a senior in HS, and we will do it similarly.
Both do not spend very much and save quite a bit. They seem to have a decent handle on money and understand a bit of its value. If anything they are like their parents and need to learn how to spend money rather than save it all.
Anonymous wrote:Op, why are you asking? Are you the same poster who always asks these very general, open-ended questions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is 13 and in either 6th or 7th grade I stopped paying for gifts she wants to give her friends. Also, I'll pay for her skincare, but not her makeup. Clothes she needs, not what she wants. She bought her own umbrella. She has to buy her own after-school snacks out with her friends.
Where does she get the money from?