The Average American Spends $687.72 Per Kid for Back to School Shopping

The Organic Prepper

If your kids are enrolled in school, you know that back to school shopping can make this the second most expensive time of the year.

This year, the National Retail Federation expects back to school spending to reach $83.6 billion dollars. This is a 10% increase over last year’s spending. The average expenditure is $687.72 per child. (source)  

Here’s the spending breakdown:

  • Clothing – $238.89
  • Electronics (computers, calculators) $204.33
  • Shoes $130.38
  • Supplies (includes backpacks and lunchboxes) $114.12

Ouch.

I can honestly say I don’t think I’ve ever spent anywhere near that amount of money on back to school stuff for both of my kids combined. It does not have to be this way.

When many Americans can barely make ends meet from month to month without any additional expenses, the pressure to spend money on back to school shopping can be the source of a great deal of stress.  Add to this that now, many schools send home a list with kids requiring parents to supply boxes of kleenex, hand sanitizer, and other classroom supplies that can really strain a budget. It’s embarrassing to be put on the spot like that, but don’t be afraid to say no or simply ignore the request. If you can’t do it, you can’t do it.

While we, as adults, can tighten the budget relentlessly on items for ourselves, it’s can be a lot harder to enforce frugality on the kiddos. But by ignoring the financial restraints and spending with reckless abandon on our kids, I don’t believe that we are doing them any favors.  The economic outlook doesn’t appear to be improving for many families, as jobs get cut and prices continue to go up.  In a world like this, showering your children with false prosperity doesn’t prepare them to survive and thrive.

It doesn’t have to be like this. You can create a budget and stick to it.

Figure out your back to school shopping budget (and teach the kids, too)

First things first, a budget is a must.  This is dependent on your personal means.  There is one simple rule here: no matter what your children believe that they “need”, it has to fit into the budget.

For years, I have used the envelope method for things like Christmas and back-to-school shopping. It’s fair, it’s efficient, and it’s tangible.  This way, I not only stayed within budget, but I taught my kids about budgeting also.

Both of my daughters are very financially responsible and handle money well because they have been making their purchases fit the existing budget since they were old enough to perform the necessary math to do so.  There have been years that they made poor choices that they regretted, but by allowing them to do this, they learned a lesson that you just can’t teach with a verbal warning.

  • Make two envelopes with each child’s name on it – one for supplies and one for clothes. Into the envelope goes a designated amount of cash – this may be $20, $100, or more, depending on your personal finances. (When making the back to school budget, be sure to keep your other expenses in mind – you still have to eat and pay your bills!)
  • Sit down with the kids and a pile of back-to-school fliers, and tell them their budgets. Expect to hear lots of cheering and excitement as the large number floats around in their heads.  Then hand them a notebook so they can write down what they need in two columns.  Mark one column “supplies” and the other “clothes”.
  • Once they have written up their lists, have them go through the fliers and choose the things they want.  Generally, their desires will greatly outstrip their budgets.
  • No, don’t increase the budget!  This is the critical teaching moment.  This is the time to teach them to figure out which of the items are necessary and which are optional.  Have the kids consider their lists. Are there any items they have from last year that would allow them to strike some items off the wish list and free up some more funds?  Do they actually NEED a new lunch box or binder, or will last year’s suffice for just a little bit longer? If they get the $80 jeans, can they manage to purchase the rest of their wardrobe for only $20?
  • Spend a couple of days brainstorming.  Let your kids think about their budgets and their lists.  You may be surprised at their solutions for stretching the money.  They can search online for deals, they can get crafty and remake some of their own items…give them the freedom to be creative and to think for themselves.
  • Go shopping.  Here are the rules.  When you are in the check out line, have your kids pay out of their envelopes. Receipts go back into the appropriate envelope, which makes it easier for them to see where their money has gone or to make returns or exchanges if necessary.  If they are out of money they are finished shopping, unless they opt to take something back for a refund. This is the key element of teaching your kids to budget. If you don’t enforce this part of the exercise, you’ve completely wasted your time with the rest of it.
If your kids have summer jobs, then they will have the freedom to buy some of those expensive “want but don’t need” items. My kids always had jobs in the summer – they babysat, they did farm chores, and they did one time projects like cleaning out the garage, painting the fence, etc.  While they were certainly allowed to supplement their budgets with their own money, quite often they saved for a bigger item or for spending money throughout the school year instead of spending their cash frivolously.  Other times, they saved up for one big-ticket clothing item that they know I won’t be buying for them.

10 budget-friendly back to school shopping tips

Here are some ways to stretch your back-to-school dollars.

  1. Clean your room.  Your kids might find pens, pencils, and art supplies – then instead of buying new ones, they can allocate that money to other things.
  2. Check out the business supply store.  Our local Staples has a great selection of 25 cent school supplies.
  3. Check the fliers for loss leaders.  Wal-Mart is famous for dirt cheap deals like loose leaf paper two packs for $1 and erasers for 25 cents.  Just don’t fall into the marketing trap of buying the overpriced items that are displayed by the loss leaders.
  4. Visit thrift stores.  You can get nice things for a fraction of the price if you shop carefully. Plus no one else will be able to copy your unique vintage style.
  5. Go to the dollar store.  Items like pens, pencils, sharpeners, pencil cases, etc., can be found inexpensively there, although I’ve found that during back-to-school sales, Wal-Mart and Target provide better quality items for the same price or lower.
  6. Focus on accessories. Fashionable accessories can make last year’s clothes look new.
  7. Look at new ways to wear old clothes. (This works better for girls than boys.)  Last year’s cool dress might be a cute top with leggings this year.
  8. Refashion old clothes.  Make outgrown jeans into a purse, revamp old tee shirts, use fabric from old shirts to make headbands, scarves, or other accessories. (This book has some fantastic ideas.)
  9. Do a dye makeover.  If you have some faded black items from the previous year, invest in a package of clothing dye, like RIT.  They’ll come out looking as good as new.  You can also get other colors and dye things like jeans or tee shirts.  If you have an item with a stain that won’t come out, dying it a darker color than the stain can give it a new life. These are also great techniques to use on thrift store finds.
  10. Wait until after school starts.  If you wait until after the first day of school, you may find that you require different items than expected. Shop for all but the most basic needs after you have gotten your list from the school.  As well, many clothing items go on sale a few weeks after school starts, which will help your money to go further.

What tips can you share?

Have you ever spent nearly $700 per kid to get ready for back to school time?

How do you get the most bang for your back-to-school bucks?  Share your ideas in the comments below!

The Organic Prepper

8 thoughts on “The Average American Spends $687.72 Per Kid for Back to School Shopping

  1. Just another example of why gubermint schooling is a really bad idea.

    We homeschool our children, and besides the far superior education they are receiving, they are not forced into a mold of conformance via peer pressure that changes their self image and demands a consumeristic approach to “normalcy”.
    Clothing – $238.89
    $$ We spend ZERO on any special clothing for “school”.
    Electronics (computers, calculators) $204.33
    $$ We spend ZERO on these items as a special purchase, since we already have adequate computers and calculators; most of which have lasted for many years. We do not need to have the latest and greatest gadgets to compete (either academically or socially).
    Shoes $130.38
    $$ We spend ZERO extra on “school shoes”, since very likely, our children are not shod when they do their studies. We buy shoes as needed, which is less often than those who go to the gubermint schools, since our children do not have to walk from classroom to classroom all day.
    Supplies (includes backpacks and lunchboxes) $114.12
    $$ We spend ZERO on backpacks and lunchboxes (although we all DO have some very nice backpacks, they have nothing to do with school). Our children eat together as a family, and have wholesome, mostly hot meals for breakfast and lunch.

    The only things we spend any FRNs on is notebooks (15 cents each on sale); pens, pencils and erasers (also purchased when on sale), copy paper (probably our largest expense, perhaps $40 per child per year), correction markers for teacher, and subject folders to keep the daily lessons organized. Our total cost per year is about $60 per child.

    Get your children out of the CORPORATE education centers!

    1. And, really (especially if you belong to a Home School co-op where you can borrow textbooks that might be just a bit out of date, esp. science books), you don’t even need to purchase textbooks, or you can as you say do the lessons online (we home schooled in the 90s and early 2000s when we still had dial-up…remote rural and all that, no wifi then, so we couldn’t do online stuff). Back in the day as I state below we spent about $300 per child, on pretty much everything, including supplies.

      1. Was at Wal-mart the other day and saw a man with a basket filled to the very top and then some. Backpacks, paper, etc.. Lots of backpacks by the way. I thought it was pretty strange, the man has 25 children perhaps? Well, a couple days later I heard on the radio news that teachers in Texas have to purchase their own supplies for their classrooms! What the heck was my immediate thought, my second was, well, wheres all my property tax money going to fund the ISD that I don’t utilize and never have? Most every penny of this stinking tax goes to the ISD. Very little on roads and bridges. What are they doing with the school tax money that I loathe to shell out EVERY year to so called “educate” someone else’s offspring. Oh, but we don’t live in a socialist cesspool like those nasty Venezuelans, do we.
        Jokes on us!!!!

  2. Meaning, that $300 or so you spend on home school texts for each of your children saves you more than $300 on “back to school” clothing or whatever, since when you home school you DO NOT NEED “peer-pressurized” “trendy
    “back to school” clothing! Just another reason (besides the obvious ones) to home school your kids!

  3. “The Average American Spends $687.72 Per Kid for Back to School Shopping”

    Because the average American is an idiot that doesn’t know the difference between education and indoctrination.

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