Student Finance in Connecticut

Open an account in Connecticut

  1. Passport, I-20, US address, possible SSN or ITIN.
  2. Choose branch or neobank with branches in Connecticut.
  3. Request a commission-free student/checking account; activate low balance alert.
  4. Connect apps for campus and rent payments (ACH, Zelle where available).

Banks present in the state

M&T, Webster, People’s United— compare ATM fees, international wire transfers, and non-resident requirements.

Taxes: Federal + Connecticut

  • Income: Maximum rate approx6.99% (). Tax Foundation.
  • Combined sales tax: about6.35%— add to the price indicated in stores. ⚠️ Check on the official website.
  • Pensions / Social Security (state): partially exempt.
  • MERIC cost of living index:113.1 (US = 100).

Minimum wage and monthly budget

  • Legal minimum:$16.94/hour ⚠️ Check on the official DOL website.
  • Tips (tipped):$6.59/hour — tip credit applicable
  • Metro Rental (Hartford): approximately $1750/month (sharing reduces cost).
  • Campus insurance: often $1,500–3,500/year — see Health guide.

Transfers from Italy

  • Wise, Revolut, Remitly— Compare rate and fee vs bank transfer.
  • Wire SWIFT- Costly; maintains receipts for proof of funds.
  • Cash— Customs declaration over $10,000; it is not the primary method for renting.

Property tax and students

Generally no for non-owner students; discounts for the elderly/disabled. As a tenant you don’t pay property tax directly, but it is included in the rent of many landlords.

Common mistakes

  • Do not set aside federal taxes on CPT salary if required.
  • Use only a home-country bank account for everything — foreign ATM and transfer fees add up fast.
  • Underestimating sales tax and healthcare costs without a network.

Credit, paper and financial history

  • Secured credit card to start credit history (useful after OPT if you stay).
  • Do not sign as guarantor of friends without understanding legal responsibility.
  • Zelle/Venmo scams: never pay rent without keys and contract.

Scholarships and funds from abroad

  • Keep scholarship letters for visa and for any 1042-S.
  • Some grants are taxable — ask at the payroll or tax clinic campus.
Volatile

Minimum wage and rates may change — check official sources before signing annual budget.

Quick reference

Connecticut: High COL (index 113.1). Taxes state up to 6.99%. Minimum $16.94.

  • Top income tax: 6.99%
  • Combined sales tax ~6.35%
  • Minimum wage ~16.94 $
  • COL index ~113.1 (10/50)

Day-to-day taxes

Daily taxes

Each campus salary may have state withholding — retain W-2.

  • Status: yes
  • Sales: ~6.35%

How much does it weigh compared to other states

Harder

More expensive than the US average — always compare with campus offers and scholarships.

Banking and credit

Banks in state

Without credit history: secured card, punctual payments, avoid too many hard pulls.

  • M&T
  • Webster
  • People's United

SSN vs ITIN

Federal rule — same in all states

SSN simplifies account opening; with ITIN only some banks limit products — ask the branch near campus.

Groceries and dining

Shopping and restaurants

Tips 15–20% in restaurants; often multicultural campus; Check local alcohol and noise regulations

  • Expense: high
  • Eat out: high

First-month checklist

First month

  • Account + debit card
  • Budget 2–3 months rent if off-campus
  • Budget App (Splitwise)
  • Marks state declaration deadline
  • Compare meal plan vs cooking

Ranked 49 of 50 for minimum wage

Ranked 10 of 50 for cost of living

State-specific data for Connecticut: Finance

Data verified: 2026-03

Top state income tax rate6.99% ⚠️
Combined sales tax6.35% ⚠️
SS / retirement taxationpartially exempt
Minimum wage$16.94/hr ⚠️
Tipped minimum wage$6.59/hr ⚠️
Cost of living index (MERIC)113.1
Property tax circuit breaker (students)Generalmente no per studenti non proprietari; agevolazioni per anziani/disabili
Major banks with branchesM&T, Webster, People's United

Sources: Tax Foundation · Tax Foundation sales · MERIC · DOL

Official U.S. sources

Informational summary only—always read the latest official pages. Not legal, tax, or medical advice.

Consumers, personal finance, and fraud

CFPB provides consumer tools and Q&A on accounts, credit, and loans. USA.gov explains how to report scams and bad practices.

Work, wages, and international taxation

Minimum wage and overtime: DOL topics. International taxpayer obligations and resources: IRS international taxpayers hub.