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College and University Blog

Moving Out After College

It鈥檚 your final year of college and graduation is so close you can almost taste it! The moment you鈥檝e been waiting for. No more dorms! No more all-night study sessions! Well 鈥 that鈥檚 true. The end of college also means that it鈥檚 time for you to figure out where you鈥檙e going to live, find a job, start paying off your student loans 鈥 in other words, if you thought you were broke during college, just wait! The real world is waiting for you and things aren鈥檛 always pretty.

Where are you going to live?

If you鈥檝e spent your college years shuffling back and forth between your dorm room and your parents鈥 house, then you haven鈥檛 yet had to go through the process of leasing an apartment. 鈥淩ent!鈥 might be the first thing that comes to mind when you think of moving out on your own, but there鈥檚 a lot more than a month鈥檚 rent involved.

Most apartment communities usually require potential residents to go through an application process. Yes, that鈥檚 just what it sounds like- you have to apply to find out if you鈥檒l even be allowed to move in to the neighborhood! This involves things such as a credit check, a background check, and employment history and income verification to ensure that you have a job and will be able to afford to pay your rent. Don鈥檛 have a job yet? That might cause problems. Maybe your parents will help you out by acting as co-applicants, but some apartment communities do not allow co-signers on leases.

The rental application usually comes with a cost attached. When I moved into my first apartment, I had to pay a $100 non-refundable application fee, which meant that even if they told me I could not rent an apartment after all, I was not getting my money back. This fee varies from community to community. Once I was approved and told that I was good to go and allowed to move in, I had to give a deposit equivalent to one month鈥檚 rent 鈥 along with the first month’s rent and last month鈥檚 rent. I was also required to have renter鈥檚 insurance, which tacked another $20 onto my monthly expenses.

Once you have an apartment, you鈥檙e also going to need things like electricity and water. I鈥檝e heard of some apartments that include utilities, but that isn’t always the case. If it鈥檚 not included, the apartment community will usually require you to have the utilities turned on in your own name, and many utility companies charge a deposit before they will do that for you. Some will waive the deposit fee if you ask them to check your credit history, but if you鈥檙e a fresh-out-of-college twentysomething, you might not have much of a credit history to help you out.

All of these things can make moving out on your own extremely expensive, particularly if you don鈥檛 even have furniture yet. In that case you’ll need to purchase some basic necessities.

Want to hear something that might scare you after reading all of this? The National Association of Colleges and Employers annual student survey found that only 20% of 2009 college graduates who applied for a job actually had one by the end of April, which was down from half in 2007.

Perhaps that is why (according to a survey conducted on CollegeGrad.com) 77% of college grad job seekers moved back home in 2008, up from 73% in 2007, and 67% in 2006.

So yes, it鈥檚 sad but it鈥檚 true. You may have to live with your parents after your graduation. If this is the case, don鈥檛 despair. I actually know several people that had to do it, and they鈥檝e all turned out fine. One of my friends is a teacher, and she lived with her mom and dad for about two years after we graduated from college together. I know another young woman that moved to a brand new city after her graduation, only to wind up coming back home anyway. She now lives with her father while she job hunts in the town she tried to leave. If you think that sounds awful, well 鈥 I even know a few married couples that moved in with the husband or wife鈥檚 parents for a year after their wedding in order to save money to act as a down payment on a house! It might be annoying at the time, but you鈥檒l laugh about it later.

If you end up living with your parents (or with a sibling or any other person that鈥檚 charging you little or no rent) after your college graduation, there is light at the end of the tunnel. There are a few things to do to save up to get out on your own after all.

You are going to need to build yourself a nest egg to cover all of the various moving-out expenses that I mentioned earlier. Try to figure out how much you think you will need to save, and then add a few hundred dollars to that amount to act as emergency funds. Things usually wind up costing much more than you think they will.

Only buy necessities. You probably don鈥檛 need a ton of new clothes or DVD鈥檚. Unless it is absolutely necessary for survival, don鈥檛 buy it. Try to cut back on dining out or going out for drinks, too. It all adds up.

If all else fails, see if you can find a potential roommate that will help you cut your apartment costs in half. It might not have been your life鈥檚 dream, but it will help get you out of your parents鈥 basement.

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Melissa Rhone earned her Bachelor of Music in Education from the University of Tampa. She resides in the Tampa Bay area and enjoys writing about college, pop culture, and epilepsy awareness.