Enroll Your College-Bound
Kids in Spending 101
By
Janet Hill
So you’re about
to send your child off to college, and suddenly you find yourself
lying awake at night, agonizing over all the little things that
just might go wrong. Sound familiar? If you take the time now
to talk to your kids about finances, you’ll have one less thing
to worry about come September.
Talk with your kids a month or two
before they leave for school. Clarify who will be paying for what (i.e., housing, food, tuition,
books, etc.). Will you give your kids an allowance? If so, what
is it intended to cover? Are they expected to get a job? To avoid
a financial disaster, address these issues before they come up.
Teach them to budget. Have your kids document their expenses
and spending for a couple of months. Encourage them to keep receipts
and slips, even for the little things. After the first month,
talk with them—add up all their sources of income and compare
that to the expenses. If the expenses are less than the income,
your kids are in good shape. If not, it’s time to start talking
about ways to cut spending. Have them classify their expenses
and then look carefully at the categories where spending can be
adjusted, such as food, cable TV, telephone, etc.
Don’t blame
or chastise them; it’s likely that they have underestimated their
expenses because they have never been on their own before. Because
of this, it is important that they know to put a certain amount
of money aside each month in order to cover the cost of unforeseen
expenses such as speeding tickets, car repairs, computer problems,
and so on. Encourage your kids to come up with a spending limit
for each week. If they can’t stick to it one week, they can make
up for it by spending less the following week.
Suggest they
contact their soon-to-be roommates before school begins to discuss
who will be responsible for bringing what. This is a good way
to cut a few costs, and, as an added bonus, you can avoid winding
up at school with two VCRs and no TV.
If they don’t have them already, open
up a checking and savings account for your kids. If your kid is going far, it might
be a good idea to open accounts at a bank near campus. Teach your
kids how to balance their checkbooks, and encourage them to do
so monthly with each statement. If you plan on giving them an
allowance, make arrangements for how the money is going to be
sent. Will you be setting up an automatic transfer from your account
to theirs? Will you be sending them a check each month?
Talk to them about credit cards. It’s exciting, tempting, and expensive
when you’re living alone for the first time. Your kids are going
to be inundated with credit card offers on campus, so be
upfront about the issue before they get into trouble. Consider
setting them up with a lower-rate card before they start school
to reduce temptation. Be clear if you will be a co-signer or not.
Will you be responsible for the entire bill, and, if so, do they
have free rein to spend, or is it for emergencies and travel home
only?
If your children
will be responsible for their own credit card bills, it is crucial
that you emphasize the importance of maintaining good credit.
Encourage them to pay off their statement in full each month to
avoid interest charges. Show them the math by using your own credit
card statements, explaining how much interest charges add to a
balance and how long it takes to pay the balance off. There are
numerous credit card calculators online to assist you.
If your kids
start getting into trouble with the card, have a plan for dealing
with the situation. Will they be responsible for their own debt?
Will you pay it off for them, and, if so, will they have to pay
you back? If you give them a debit card to your own account, what
is it meant to pay for? What kind of limit will you be placing?
How much do you expect your children to be charging on it each
month?
Consider credit alternatives. Because a debit or check card takes
money directly out of a bank account, there is no danger of getting
into high-interest credit card debt. Another option is a stored
value card, which is just like a gift card in that it requires
you to load a certain amount of money onto the card, allowing
you to make purchases up to that amount. Unlike a gift card, however,
stored value cards can be used anywhere that the associated credit
card is accepted, and you have the option to reload the card when
its funds are depleted.
If you have
already had conversations with your children about finances in
the past, they’re probably going to be fine. Going off to college
is a difficult change for both of you. But if you talk to your
kids about these issues and help them to clearly outline reasonable
and responsible financial behavior, you should have less to worry
about. Otherwise, they may be in for a very costly lesson.
Janet Hill is a financial consultant
practicing in Salt Lake City, Ut.. She offers Wealth Management
and Safe Money Options as a registered representative of Commonwealth Financial Network—a member firm of the NASD/SIPC. She can be reached at
801-269-6749.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.