San Diego Union-Tribune

Dorm comfort on a budget

Cozy college quarters come in a varying array of prices — sometimes, not always, with Mom and Dad’s help

- BY ANNE D’INNOCENZIO

From $300 studded headboards and $100 coffee table books to custom-made cabinets to disguise your minifridge, students are spending big bucks to decorate their dorm rooms, adding yet another layer to the soaring costs of college.

Some are even going so far as to hire interior designers to beautify their 12 feet by 20 feet of space.

Lesley Lachman, 18, planned her furnishing­s for her dorm room with her roommate immediatel­y after deciding to attend the University of Mississipp­i back in May. The Rye, N.Y., resident scoured websites like Pinterest and designed her room herself — with hues of pink, purple and green culled from a mix of pricey brands like Essentials with Eden as well as less expensive items from Ikea and Facebook Marketplac­e. Total cost for the design? About $3,000, covered by her parents.

“There’s so much work that had to be done because it felt lackluster. It didn’t feel homey,” said Lachman, who posted a “before” and “after” video of her room on TikTok.

The “before” video shows stark yellow cinder-block walls, a mustardcol­ored built-in desk and an open closet. The “after” video shows a complete makeover, with lacy curtains to cover the closet, embroidere­d pillows and a cushy white headboard to dress up her bed, and customized framed art of hearts.

“I’m so in love with the room,” Lachman said after her redesign. “I want to leave the door open and want everyone to stop by and admire it.”

Overall, the back-to-college season is big business, with families expected to spend an average of about $1,367 per person, up 14 percent from a year ago, according to an annual survey conducted this summer by the National Retail Federation and market researcher Prosper Insights & Analytics. Spending on big-ticket items such as electronic­s and dorm furnishing­s as well as necessitie­s like food accounted for more than half of the increase, NRF said.

Meanwhile, the total cost of college — including tuition, fees, room and board — almost doubled between 1992 and 2022, rising from an inflation-adjusted average of $14,441 per year to $26,903 across all types of universiti­es, according to National Center for Education Statistics, the statistica­l branch of the Education Department. Dorm costs saw a similar spike over the same time span, rising from $3,824 to $7,097.

Sara Hunt, 19, a sophomore at New

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 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS AP PHOTOS ?? Sara Hunt, 19, a sophomore at New York University, decorated her dorm with items found at discount stores and looked for deals to keep the cost lower.
BEBETO MATTHEWS AP PHOTOS Sara Hunt, 19, a sophomore at New York University, decorated her dorm with items found at discount stores and looked for deals to keep the cost lower.
 ?? ?? Hunt talks in her dorm room with visiting freshmen Noé Teyssier (left) and David Panner. Hunt wanted her dorm room to look cozy, but her budget was $100. Above, her desk in the dorm.
Hunt talks in her dorm room with visiting freshmen Noé Teyssier (left) and David Panner. Hunt wanted her dorm room to look cozy, but her budget was $100. Above, her desk in the dorm.

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