Survey: 31% of back-to-school shoppers will take on debt to fund their spending this year

Isabella Canales, a 29-year-old living in suburban Dallas, has been deeply stressed about money this year. Though she and her husband have a household income of nearly $9,000 per month pre-tax, their budget is nearly completely eaten up by expensive living expenses and paying back around $57,000 of medical debt and consumer debt.

The last thing she needed was another huge expense. Unfortunately, the high cost of the back-to-school season has left her even further in debt.

In July, Canales spent nearly $1,000 on supplies and clothing for her two oldest daughters, who are going into second and third grade at a local charter school. That’s $200 more than she spent last year. And that’s not all — she also received a long school supplies list from her 2-year-old’s daycare, asking her to purchase items such as index cards, cardstock paper, Lysol wipes, paint, watercolors, pencil bags, highlighters, paintbrushes and a painting apron.

“I don’t understand how people are living right now,” Canales says. “When you look at the amount that you have to pay for these uniforms and all that stuff, it’s crazy.”

As the beginning of the 2024-2025 school year approaches, many households are struggling to afford books, clothes and school supplies. For some, that struggle is leading to carrying debt.

Nearly one-third (31 percent) of U.S. adults doing back-to-school shopping this year are going into debt to pay for it (or already have), according to Bankrate’s newest Back to School Survey.

That includes 24 percent of people who are using/plan to use credit cards and paying the balance over time and 13 percent who are using/plan to use buy now, pay later services. The percentage hasn’t changed much since 2022, the last time Bankrate asked about back-to-school spending, when 29 percent of back-to-school shoppers went into debt.

As parents and students alike try to figure out how to pay for their supplies this fall, this is how people are shopping this back-to-school season.

<blockquote><p>As inflation has come down, Americans have become more comfortable paying for things like back-to-school shopping.</p></blockquote><p><cite>— Ted Rossman, Bankrate Senior Credit Card Analyst</cite></p>

As inflation has come down, Americans have become more comfortable paying for things like back-to-school shopping.

— Ted Rossman, Bankrate Senior Credit Card Analyst

Bankrate’s insights on back-to-school shopping

  • Back-to-school debt is common. 31% of back-to-school shoppers are going into debt from their spending, up from 29% in 2022. That includes 24% who are using credit cards and carrying balances over time and 13% who are using buy now, pay later services.

  • Parents are trying to save money this year. 46% of back-to-school shoppers will implement money-saving strategies this year, including 28% who have sought/will seek out more deals or coupons than in the past, 22% who had/will have money specifically set aside or budgeted, 21% who bought/plan to buy cheaper brands than usual and 19% who bought/plan to by fewer school supplies than in previous years due to the cost.

  • Inflation has a smaller impact since 2022. 32% of back-to-school shoppers say inflation changed/will change the way they shop this year, down from 41% in 2022.