March 31, 2015
Foster City, CA – March 31, 2015 – A new nationwide survey released today by Visa Inc., shows that the burgeoning phenomenon of “promposals” – elaborate invitations to the high school prom that can mirror a marriage proposal – are costing the average American household with teens a staggering $324 in 2015.
Promposals have become significantly more extravagant in recent years and now represent in excess of one third of the $919 total that the average prom-going teen will spend on the dance in 2015. Costs include, attire, limousine rental, tickets, flowers, pictures, food, accommodations, after party, etc. While total prom spending is down 6% this year from the $978 that parents and teens forked over in 2014, Visa added the category of promposal spending for the first time to the company’s annual survey.
“Prom is a fun night for kids to get together and dance, but spending $300 plus on a promposal to simply ask your date is exorbitant,” said Nat Sillin, Visa’s head of U.S. Financial Education. “Our improved Plan’it Prom app can help parents and teens make prom special on any budget. This is a great tool to set a budget for parents to help their teens plan and save for an amazing experience they can actually afford.”
The free Plan’it Prom app lets users make a realistic, detailed prom budget and then helps them stick to that budget by allowing them to track their spending as they shop. The app has been updated to include a redesigned user interface to appeal to teens, improved user experience to allow for easier budgeting and added sharing features via social media and text message. Plan’it Prom is available free in the iTunes store, the Google Play store and from www.practicalmoneyskills.com/prom.
Visa’s prom survey also revealed some interesting regional and economic disparities. This year, Canadians plan to spend $508 overall on prom of which $151 will be on promposal, compared to $919 overall for U.S. families. Dads plan to outspend moms by 63%, $1160 vs. $710. The Northeast took the spending crown and the Midwest continued its reputation for thrift:
Families with a total household income below $50,000 a year plan to spend $1109 on the prom. Disconcertingly, those families making under $25,000 will spend a total of $1393 for the prom, while families who make over $50,000 will spend an average of $799.
The Visa survey also found that parents are backsliding on the amount that they are planning to cover. While last year, parents were planning to pay for 56% of prom costs, this year that number has jumped to 73% of the cost of the big night. Their teens will be expected to cover only the remaining 27% of the total cost. Teens have no incentive to cut cost with parents still subsidizing this much of the total prom spending.
In addition to helping parents and teens make a budget, the Plan’it Prom app offers tips on how to reduce costs for this annual rite of passage:
The Plan’it Prom app and tips are part of Visa’s free, award-winning financial education program, Practical Money Skills for Life (www.practicalmoneyskills.com). The program reaches millions of people around the world each year. At Practical Money Skills for Life, educators, parents and students can access free educational resources including personal finance articles, games, lesson plans, and more.
**The survey results are based on 3041 live telephone interviews conducted nationally among adults 18+, using dual frame sampling (landline & cell phones) in cooperation with GfK Roper OmniTel. The interviewing dates were January 21 – 25, 2015 and the margin of error is +/- 2 percentage points for the overall sample (larger for subgroups such as households with teenagers).
About Visa
Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) is a global payments technology company that connects consumers, businesses, financial institutions, and governments in more than 200 countries and territories to fast, secure and reliable electronic payments. We operate one of the world's most advanced processing networks – VisaNet – that is capable of handling more than 56,000 transaction messages a second, with fraud protection for consumers and assured payment for merchants. Visa is not a bank and does not issue cards, extend credit or set rates and fees for consumers. Visa's innovations, however, enable its financial institution customers to offer consumers more choices: pay now with debit, pay ahead of time with prepaid or pay later with credit products. For more information, visit https://usa.visa.com/about-visa.html, visacorporate.tumblr.com and @VisaNews.