Graduation season sneaks up fast. One minute you’re at a volleyball tournament, the next you’re standing in the card aisle wondering:
“Is $50 cheap… or am I about to accidentally spend $500?”
You’re not alone. There’s no official rulebook—but there are some very real patterns based on relationship, age, and what stage the graduate is in.
Let’s take the guesswork out of it.
💰 The Quick Answer (2026 Gift Ranges)
If you just want the cheat sheet:
🎓 High School Graduation
- Parents: $100 – $500+
- Grandparents: $100 – $300
- Aunts/Uncles: $50 – $150
- Family Friends: $25 – $100
- Friends/Classmates: $20 – $50
🎓 College Graduation
- Parents: $200 – $1,000+
- Grandparents: $150 – $500
- Aunts/Uncles: $100 – $300
- Family Friends: $50 – $150
- Friends: $25 – $100
That’s the landscape. Now let’s talk about why.
🧠 What Actually Drives the Amount?
Here’s what people say matters:
- Your relationship to the grad
- Your budget
- The graduate’s plans
Here’s what actually matters in real life:
- How well you know them
- How much you like them (be honest)
- What you can comfortably afford without resentment
That last one matters more than anything. Nobody wants to Venmo $200 and quietly stew about it for three days.
📊 Real (and Slightly Uncomfortable) Data Points
Some trends pulled from surveys and gifting platforms over the last couple years:
- The average graduation cash gift in the U.S. sits around $50–$100
- 70%+ of grads say they prefer cash over physical gifts
- Gifts tend to increase 30–50% for college grads vs. high school
- Midwest (yep, us) tends to be slightly more conservative than coastal areas
Translation:
If you give $50, you’re normal.
If you give $100, you’re generous.
If you give $200+, you’re either close family… or trying to win something.
🤝 Breaking It Down by Relationship
👨👩👧 Immediate Family
This is where things get loose.
Parents often go big—not just cash, but:
- Lump sums
- Paying off part of tuition
- Trips
- “Here’s money… but also a speech” (mandatory)
No real ceiling here. Just don’t put yourself in a hole trying to keep up with someone else’s Instagram post.
🧓 Extended Family (Aunts, Uncles, Grandparents)
This is the “respectable and expected” tier.
- $50 feels fine
- $100 feels strong
- $150+ says “we’re close”
Grandparents tend to skew higher, mostly because they’ve been waiting 18 years to hand over an envelope and say something emotional.
🏡 Family Friends / Neighbors
This is where people overthink it.
Reality:
- $25–$50 = totally acceptable
- $75–$100 = generous
If you haven’t talked to the kid since they were 8… you don’t need to fund their freshman meal plan.
🧑🤝🧑 Friends
Keep it simple.
- High school friends: $20–$50
- College friends: $25–$100
Or skip cash and go with something funny or meaningful. Nobody expects their buddy to drop $200 unless they just hit it big on crypto.
🎁 How to Give Money Without Feeling Lazy
Let’s be honest—cash is king, but handing someone a plain envelope feels like you stopped at CVS on the way (because… you did).
Here are better ways to package it
🎁 3. Gift Cards (But Make It Useful)


Best options:
- Amazon (no-brainer for dorm stuff)
- Target/Walmart
- Starbucks
- Uber Eats / DoorDash
👉 Basically: fund their bad decisions in a controlled way
😂 4. Funny Money Gifts



- Cash in a pizza box
- Money rolled in toilet paper
- Balloon pop reveal
🧾 Final Thought (The One People Don’t Say Out Loud)
Nobody remembers the exact amount you gave.
They remember:
- If you showed up
- If you made it feel thoughtful
- If the card didn’t say “Congrats… Love, uh… you?”
Give what feels right. Add a little personality. Don’t overthink it.
And if you’re still unsure?
$50 and a decent card has gotten millions of people through graduation season just fine.
