I can only answer for my student who lived in student accommodation and came home every weekend. Her and her housemates do not like to grocery shop. At least once a month, they would wrangle a lift back and would bring stocks of pasta, toilet paper, rice, beans, cereals, sauce jars and frozen products.
When travelling back on the sunday night by public transport they would pack fruit , yogurts, bread, milk etc for the 5 days. They would also text a shopping list during the week to the parents. So basically their preferred food was added to the family shop. The housemates informally had a rota of whos turn it was to supply bin bags , sponges, toilet paper etc.. noone fell out over that. Overall, it didn't cost any more than when student lived at home. A bit of forward planning is needed though.
We then gave €20 per week towards phone, bus tickets, socialising etc... our student had a partime job so she sorted her own clothes and makeup.
Some parents drop their kid back every sunday night via a lidl/aldi. Others bring 'Monday's dinner' in a lunch box. They usually arrive home ravenous on a friday night. None of them like wasting their own money on food. Hth
When travelling back on the sunday night by public transport they would pack fruit , yogurts, bread, milk etc for the 5 days. They would also text a shopping list during the week to the parents. So basically their preferred food was added to the family shop. The housemates informally had a rota of whos turn it was to supply bin bags , sponges, toilet paper etc.. noone fell out over that. Overall, it didn't cost any more than when student lived at home. A bit of forward planning is needed though.
We then gave €20 per week towards phone, bus tickets, socialising etc... our student had a partime job so she sorted her own clothes and makeup.
Some parents drop their kid back every sunday night via a lidl/aldi. Others bring 'Monday's dinner' in a lunch box. They usually arrive home ravenous on a friday night. None of them like wasting their own money on food. Hth