The short answer is, Buy as little as possible. His room will be smaller than you expect once you start moving things in.
Real needs, echoing previous posters :
- Everything to make his bed very comfortable. Definitely look into some sort of mattress pad -- my daughter described her bed at orientation as "a Holocaust camp reject", yet once she added a $15 XL twin mattress pad from ebay and two new pillows, she loved it. We only bought one set of bedsheets; dorms are short on storage, and the bed can just be naked for an hour while the sheets are in the wash. A hint I read on this bed last year: When you help him move in, make his bed, and hide a $20 bill under the fitted sheets . . . with a note instructing him to call you when he finds it! You'll be amuzed to learn just how long he can go without changing the sheets.
- Bed risers . . . we bought a set of those years ago, and thus begins the story of how we got a hole in the wall. No, I cannot recommend them.
- I say yes to the printer question. My daughter and her roommate both got a good bit of use out of her printer (most of their professors
did not use on-line turn in), as using the school's services would've meant walking to the library. This was one of the things that the two girls coordinated.
- Other things they coordinated: Rug, trash can, TV, kitchen items
- Don't buy a desk lamp yet. When I was in college my desk had a hutch that included a flourescent lamp. My daughter's room
did not come with this feature. Depending upon the layout of his room, he may or may not also want a bedside lamp. Sometimes the desk lamp can "swing around" to serve both purposes.
- My daughter needed cables for something -- I honestly can't remember what, but we knew it ahead of time -- and my smarty-pants husband purchased cables
in all the standard lengths, kept them new in the packages, all the packages in one big bag with the receipts . . . and after he helped her install the right size in her room, he returned the others to our hometown
Best Buy.
- Most of the dorms at my daughter's school include a micro-fridge in every room, so don't buy that 'til you're sure.
- Buy half a dozen "milk crates". Not only are they great for transporting things, they can be closet organizers, book shelves, whatever in his dorm room . . . and one day they can become a coffee table or nightstands in his first apartment. 10-15 years from now he'll still be using those things for something!
- Don't buy a broom or vaccum cleaner just yet. Many dorms offer these things in the downstairs lobby for check-out, which is better than having to store them in the small rooms. When I was in school we just had to leave our ID to take the vaccum upstairs. My daughter says the maid is very willing to let them borrow her vaccum while she's doing the bathrooms.
- Small supply of office needs: Stapler, tape, scissors, post-its, extra printer cartridge, pencils and pens
- Calculator, if he's taking any math or science
- Backpack
- Good walking shoes, including some good for the rain -- my daughter has been very surprised at just how much she walks in college
- Towels -- my daughter has three towels and a dozen washcloths, and that seems to be suiting her fine
- Laundry supplies
- A bathroom bucket to carry to the shower -- my daughter also purchased a small dishwashing tub, in which she sets the wet bucket after her shower -- this allows her to put it inside her closet without making things wet.
- If his room is tiled, some type of floor mat to place beside his bed
- Command stick-on strips
- Power strip -- electrical cords are usually not allowed
- Over-the-door coat holder for his closet door
No matter how well you pack, he's going to end up without something (for example, we never expected that the school wouldn't provide safety goggles in Chemistry class). Help him a little, but let this be HIS PROJECT. This is a learning experience, and you should support him . . . but not excuse him from the effort.
I'll echo what another poster said: Do not count on buying things in his school-town once you've arrived. On move-in day the stores'll be PACKED with parents and students out buying that forgotten item or two. Do take him on a grocery-store run before you leave him, but don't count on buying something essential -- like towels or bedsheets, for example.
The first weeks can be hard. Mail him a little card before you leave home so that the first time he checks his mailbox, he'll find a small pick-me-up.
If you want to send him something later, consider ordering it
Amazon and having it mailed directly to him. I did this once or twice for my daughter, and it reached her faster than if I'd purchased it in my hometown, packaged it and mailed it. After you've ordered something for him once, you can have his school address "saved" on the Amazon site, so it's super-easy to do it the second time.
Know what's 100% better than buying books used at Amazon? Choosing a school that includes book rentals in tuition! Really, this is great. My daughter's books cost $10 last semester -- and that was for a chemistry lab manual.