Houston Chronicle

Local back-to-school costs inch up

- By Paul Takahashi STAFF WRITER

Nina Pilson rifled through tablet cases at a local Best Buy as her two sons, Rohan, 9, and Clive, 7, played video games on some iPads on display.

The 41-year-old Houston mother was shopping for a kid-proof case to protect a $399 iPad she recently purchased for her family to use for school, work and entertainm­ent. Pilson budgeted between $30 and $40 for the tablet case, yet another one of many expenses she expects to incur during the busy backto-school shopping season.

There’s $135 for two prepackage­d school supply kits, $150 for new clothes and shoes and another $150 for new helmets, bats and a baseball bag for her older son. Last year, she spent $200 for lacrosse gear for her sons as they headed back to school.

“It’s never-ending,” Pilson said.

As thousands of Houston--

area students return to school classrooms and college lecture halls this month, parents and young adults across the region are opening their wallets and purses for new clothes, school supplies and electronic­s.

Back-to-school represents the second-largest shopping season of the year, eclipsed only by the holiday season. Spending on K-12 and college supplies is expectedto­reach $80.7 billion this year, down from lastyear’s$82.8 billion largelydue­to fewer households with children in grade school, according to the National Retail Federation.

Texas’ tax-free holiday, Aug. 9-11, is expected to ease financial stress for familieswh­ile bolstering back-toschool sales for retailers. The tax holiday exempts sales tax for most clothing, footwear, school supplies and backpacks priced below $100. Texas familiesha­vesavedmor­ethan $102 million since the state enacted the sales tax holiday in 1999.

“As a father of three, I know how these expenses can add up,” Texas Comptrolle­r Glenn Hegar said.

Prices rise

In Houston, the average family with two school-aged children will spend $609 on back-to-school shopping, anincrease­of6.7percentfr­om last year and $90 more than the national average, according to Deloitte’s 12th annual back-to-school survey. Deloitte firm polled 1,200 families nationally, including 400 in the Houston area.

Local shoppers who responded to Deloitte’s survey said they plan to spend an average $339 on clothing and shoes and $136 on school supplies. While apparel and school supplies remain perennial staples of back-to-school shopping, families are increasing­ly buying computers, cellphones and tablets as technology seeps into children’s classroom andsociall­ife. Manygrades­choolers today submit class assignment­s and homework online, and communicat­e with their teachers and friends through apps.

Pilson said her two sons, who are entering fourth and second grades, are still too young for cellphones, but saidmostst­udentsstar­t sporting smartphone­s in the sixth and seventh grades.

About a quarter ofHouston families said they plan to purchase computers and electronic­s this year, spending on average $382 and $248 respective­ly. While spending on most back-to-school items is expected to remain flat this year, electronic­s sales are projected to rise by 29 percent, according to Deloitte.

“Laptops are going crazy,” said RonPhillip­s, generalman­ager of the Best Buy in the Galleria area, which is offering $50 to $250 discounts off Lenovo, HP and Dell laptops for students.

Tariffs on Chinese goods, which have roiled the stock market in recent weeks, have not had an effect on prices or sales of computers and electronic­s.

“From what I’ve seen, tariffs haven’t really translated yet into increased prices,” said Jeff Buhr, a partner in Deloitte’s Houston retail division.

Although retailers are increasing­ly selling apparel and school supplies online, themajorit­y of back-toschool shopping still occurs in brickand-mortar stores. Houstonfam­ilies are forecast to spend three-quarters of their back-to-school shopping dollars in stores and a quarter online, according to Deloitte.

Back-to-school shoppers prefer mass merchants, such as Walmart and Target, followed by e-commerce, dollar stores and specialty and office supply retailers, according to Deloitte.

Higher education, cost

Although back-to-school shopping often focuses on grade-schoolers, the bulk of the season’s dollars are spent on college students.

Nationally, the average family will spend $1,362 per college student, more than double that of K-12 students. Computers and electronic­s representt­hebulkofba­ck-to-college spending, with the average family spending $759, up12.6 percent from last year, according to Deloitte.

Sohee Park, 20, visited the Galleria-area Best Buy on a recent Wednesday, searching for a new power charger for her Acer laptop, a gift from her parents as the northwest Houston resident transfers from HoustonCom­munityColl­egetoTexas A&M University.

The sophomore engineerin­g student decided to purchase an offbrand, universal charger for $59.99 as she waits for her scholarshi­p money to come in. Park is financing her college education by herself, working at her college library, interning at RiceUniver­sity’s research labandby applying tovarious scholarshi­ps.

“My budget is tight,” Park said. Nearby, Julia Frazier, 20, was applying for a Best Buy credit card to finance a newlaptop purchase. The Conroe native, who is going into her first year studying biology at Houston Community College, is hoping to spend nomore than $2,000 on a top-of-the-line HP laptop-tablet that she plans to use throughout her college years.

Frazier, too, is paying her way through college, working full time at a Chinese-American takeout restaurant inside the Loop.

“I’m now realizing how stressful thismustha­vebeenform­yparents,” Frazier said of back-to-school shopping. “It’s not fun.”

 ?? Steve Gonzales / Staff photograph­er ?? Clive Pilson, 7, and Rohan, 9, play games on iPads while their mother, Nina, looked for tablet cases.
Steve Gonzales / Staff photograph­er Clive Pilson, 7, and Rohan, 9, play games on iPads while their mother, Nina, looked for tablet cases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States