This article has been updated. It originally published on Aug. 22, 2024.
Another school year is here, and riding piggyback is the annual pressure to refresh your kid’s supply of scissors, pencils, Disney lunch boxes, and all the other classroom gear. The costs add up: According to the National Retail Federation’s 2025 back-to-school survey, families will spend an average of $858.07 on clothing, shoes, supplies, and electronics this year. That’s $16.61 less than last year, but still the third-highest total since the survey began 22 years ago. Concern about upcoming tariffs is pushing consumers to spend earlier but, so far, it hasn’t affected how much they’re laying out.
All this shopping adds up to a lot of waste. The goods themselves have a toll on the environment, but all the plastic packaging holding those legions of pens and No. 2s is almost instantly bound for the landfill. According to the EPA, 28% of all trash in the United States—about 82 million tons—comes from packaging. And let’s not forget the microplastics shedding off those glitter-encrusted backpacks.
We’re not putting this out there to shame parents into sending kids to school with mini pencils yanked from the local Putt-Putt. Nor is it to minimize the importance of preparing children for the many pressures of the coming school year—or how the ritual of obtaining and organizing supplies can be a big part of that. Rather, it’s an opportunity to take a beat and consider a more mindful approach before clicking “add to cart” on a new superhero eraser.
Back-to-school shopping can be an opportunity to help children learn and grow. It’s perfectly reasonable to balance joy—say, buying that long-lasting Breath of the Wild backpack so your kid can feel happy and comfortable and express themself—with environmental considerations, notes Kelly Leviker, a former Beyond Plastic Advocate for the Public Interest Research Group and a parent herself.
A crucial part of this, Leviker continues, is explaining your choices to children. Tell them why you’re shopping where you shop and why you purchased what you did and didn’t. “Equip your kid with the knowledge so they can see the philosophy behind what you’re doing,” she says. And connect it to something real. Every year, for example, Leviker takes her son to help clean up the lake near their home so he can see the plastic waste firsthand—and understand the results of overconsumption.
As you outfit your kids for another school year, here are five ways to rethink your school supply shopping.
1. Take stock of what you already have
Do you know how many usable pencils are currently in your home? What about Post-its? Pens? Highlighters? The first step is obvious but often overlooked: Do an inventory. “It’s easy for a lot of parents to feel so pressed for time that they just run to the store and get everything on the list,” says Leviker. “We can all be a bit more mindful by asking ourselves what do we actually need? Let’s dig around and see.” Doing so can also help you take a breath and drown out some of the back-to-school noise to buy! buy! buy! Chances are, you’ll find some usable items as well as others that can be easily repaired.
2. Check local thrift shops and buy-nothing groups
In Leviker’s Denver neighborhood, there’s a specialized thrift store that sells art supplies. Around this time of year, the owners stock up on common back-to-school necessities to encourage local families to purchase items there. “It’s such a great resource,” she says. “While one like it might not be in your neighborhood, there are lots of similar stores.” Her advice: Seek out supplies at thrift and secondhand shops as well as Facebook Marketplace and local Buy Nothing groups. Freecycle, a nonprofit dedicated to reuse and keeping items out of landfills, is another great resource. Members of local chapters list items they’re giving away as well as what they need. The cost savings is a nice bonus.
3. Look for refurbished tech
Does your child need a laptop or tablet this year? If you can’t find one at a secondhand store or marketplace, consider the refurbished route. “It’s a great way to find affordable items that are pre-used but still in good condition,” she says. This also helps keep e-waste out of landfills. All products sold through Amazon’s Renewed program are significantly marked down, cleaned, tested, and come with a 90-day guarantee. Such re-commerce sites as Gazelle and Back Market are excellent as well, with high transparency and assurances. And the sales are solid: A kid-appropriate refurbished Dell Chromebook that normally retails for $494 is currently offered on Back Market for $52. (The same shopping advice applies to clothes, as well, and our favorite secondhand marketplaces each have kids’ shops.)
4. Be mindful of materials
Listen, there will be items on the list you’ll want to purchase new. Maybe you want your child to have a really great water bottle or top-notch lunch box. In that case, Leviker urges parents to pay attention to quality: Avoid as much plastic as possible, and find products that stress longevity. Last year, she purchased a lunch box for her son made by PlanetBox. It’s bento-style and made from durable stainless steel. “It’s a little expensive, but it will last for the entirety of his schooling,” she says. “We’d gotten him a plastic lunch box the year before, but it was looking pretty ratty. I could’ve gotten him another and just continued the cycle of buying a new plastic lunch box every year. But what would be the point?”
5. Consider communal options
Certain schools offer programs where, instead of buying personal pens and paper, parents contribute communal supplies to classrooms. Pooling goods could be a great idea, Leviker says. “It potentially could mean that less supplies need to be purchased,” she says. It does, however, up the likelihood that items might be purchased new, which is a trade-off. “But,” she adds, “it could mean that supplies could be used in a classroom year after year. I think any potential issues could be worked out, as long as there is that intent.”