So Many Colleges, So Costly to Tour Them All
Got a child who’s bound for college? Here’s how to visit all those campuses without breaking the family bank.
By Dan Kadlec, Money

The first time I set foot on campus at my alma mater 31 years ago was the week that classes began. Clearly, times have changed. These days kids expect to visit a dozen or more colleges before they decide where to apply, and a few more after acceptances roll in (you hope) to determine the winner. Every campus has its own vibe, and experiencing it firsthand really is helpful. But seeing too many schools can also be counterproductive — the distinctions blur, and it’s both stressful and expensive. A single overnight trip for two can top $1,000 for airfare, car rental, hotel, meals and parking. Now multiply that by 12.
I should know. My daughter and I jumped headlong into her college search, blitzing three parts of the country (seven schools and 1,800 miles) in one week. As I was tallying the travel receipts (ouch!), I vowed to be smarter on my next go-round. You may find that my new strategy helps you too.
Start Close to Home
Before you begin booking plane tickets and hotel rooms, check out a few campuses in your backyard — even if your child is dead set against attending them. Those first visits are mostly about figuring out priorities. Does your child prefer a big or small school? Urban or pastoral setting? By starting with schools near home, you can solve this part of the college-search puzzle on the cheap.
Take a Virtual Tour
An online tour is no substitute for the real thing. But this can be an inexpensive way to cull questionable schools from your initial list and to refresh your memory of colleges you visited months ago. Rather than rely on the slickly produced official video from the college (typically available on its Website or at campustours.com), consider the independently made videos of actual tours at collegiatechoice.com ($15 per DVD).
Get In, Get Out
In areas with lots of colleges, schedule visits to several schools on the same trip, aiming to see at least two campuses a day. Slow the pace if you land on a campus that sings to your teenager, but move on quickly if it’s clear that the fit isn’t right. Register in advance with the admissions office for a tour and an information session. “Colleges today pay a lot of attention to demonstrated interest,” says Shirley Levin, a college consultant in Rockville, Md. If your child is on the bubble and the college has documented his visits and other inquiries (say, at a college fair), he may gain an edge.
Scout for Discounts
Some schools — and their marketing partners — offer reduced rates on transportation and hotel stays for prospective students (check with the admissions office or on the college’s Website under Admissions or Tours). You can get a two-for-one Amtrak deal through Campusvisit.com ; the site also offers hotel discounts for Boston, Philadelphia and northeastern Ohio. Now if we could just find a college to give us a break on tuition too, we’d be all set.
Adapted from the June 2007 issue of Money. © 2008 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
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