Do Teen-agers Have To Be So Expensive?
By Jonni McCoy
www.miserlymoms.com
There is no doubt about it -
teen-agers are expensive. But there are some ways to make a dent into
how expensive they are. Let's take clothes first. What seems to work
the best for our family is to give the teen what you have allotted for
their clothing budget. It should be enough to cover them with normal
clothes (not stylish or brand name) that you could buy on sale at the
department stores. If they want to spend more than that amount on
stylish or name-brand clothes, then they will have to make up the
difference with their own money. This has been tried and works well.
They make mistakes at first, like blowing the entire wad on one jacket.
But after a few months of wearing the same clothes, they learn from it.
These are the years where they have to learn to make choices with their
money and should not expect to have everything that they want.
As for the car insurance, make sure to investigate the discounts that
are available to you (good-student, multi-policy, etc.) Make sure you
are getting other discounts on your own coverage to reduce the overall
cost (non-smoker, middle-age, anti-theft-devices, low mileage, etc.).
We have also found it cheaper to keep them on our policy than to have
them on their own policy. Ask your insurance agent for suggestions as
well. You should also shop around for quotes from different insurance
carriers. Insurance rates very considerably between companies. Just
make sure that the company is reputable - cheapest is not always the
best. To check a company's rating, visit www.insure.com/ratings/ .
I recommend that you make them be responsible for their own insurance.
If they still cannot afford the insurance, then perhaps they shouldn't
have the privilege to drive.
Your last area of concern was food. Snacks are what eat up a family's
budget, whether it's because of teens or not. Snacks are handy and
usually taste better than "staple" food. So we need to be careful in
this area. If the family had a choice, they would make snacks their
meals. At our house, we budget for a certain amount of store-bought
snacks, and if they eat them all in one day, that's their loss. The
snacks don't get replenished until the next week's shopping. But they
won't starve, because we have a supply of homemade snacks on hand:
banana bread, cookies, muffins, popcorn, etc. Homemade snacks cost a
fraction of the cost of store-bought. We cook them in bulk and keep
them on hand. I even taught my teenage son how to cook his favorites so
he can feed himself :-)