Anonymous wrote:whatever the student earned over the summer.
Anonymous wrote:whatever the student earned over the summer.
Anonymous wrote:We told our son he has to have $2,000 in the bank before starting college in September - giving him essentially $250/month of spending money. So he's worked all summer and has surpassed that target.
I'll probably slip him $100 at dropoff day, and we'll pay for all books, dorm needs, etc., but then he's on his own for spending money.
Anonymous wrote:I gave 80/week
there's pizza, personal hygiene items, haircuts, lost sneakers, and uber costs...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No suggestions on amount but a friend watched her son blow through all his money early in the year and she HIGHLY suggested, even for a kid who is frugal, to parcel out any spending money evenly throughout the year to help them learn to budget. I have a child headed to college this year and I will transfer a set amount every month to his bank account and anything beyond that comes from his savings. We will pay books and any school fees as part of our contribution with room & board. Everything else is on him!
We do a semester amount and to me part of the value is that they learn to budget. If they blow through it then it's on them. It's not like they can't eat (meal plan) so a pretty low risk way to figure out how to manage spending.
Anonymous wrote:No suggestions on amount but a friend watched her son blow through all his money early in the year and she HIGHLY suggested, even for a kid who is frugal, to parcel out any spending money evenly throughout the year to help them learn to budget. I have a child headed to college this year and I will transfer a set amount every month to his bank account and anything beyond that comes from his savings. We will pay books and any school fees as part of our contribution with room & board. Everything else is on him!
Anonymous wrote:My parents gave me $50 / week. That was back in the early 00's, though. It was more than enough.