Student Finance in South Carolina

Open an account in South Carolina

  1. Passport, I-20, US address, possible SSN or ITIN.
  2. Choose branch or neobank with branches in South Carolina.
  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

Truist, South State, Wells Fargo— compare ATM fees, international wire transfers, and non-resident requirements.

Taxes: Federal + South Carolina

  • Income: Maximum rate approx6.4% (). Tax Foundation.
  • Combined sales tax: about7.49%— add to the price indicated in stores. ⚠️ Check on the official website.
  • Pensions / Social Security (state): partially exempt.
  • MERIC cost of living index:91.6 (US = 100).

Minimum wage and monthly budget

  • Legal minimum:$7.25/hour ⚠️ Check on the official DOL website.
  • Tips (tipped):$2.13/hour — tip credit applicable
  • Subway Rental (Charleston): approximately $1400/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

South Carolina: COL medio (indice 91.6). Tasse stato fino al 6.4%. Minimo 7.25 $.

  • Income tax top: 6.4%
  • Sales tax combinata ~7.49%
  • Minimum wage ~7.25 $
  • COL index ~91.6 (33/50)

Day-to-day taxes

Daily taxes

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

  • Status: yes
  • Sales: ~7.49%

How much does it weigh compared to other states

Moderate

Average - the difference is made by the chosen campus city.

Banking and credit

Banks in state

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

  • Truist
  • South State
  • Wells Fargo

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: average
  • Eat out: average

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 15 of 50 for minimum wage

Ranked 33 of 50 for cost of living

State-specific data for South Carolina: Finance

Data verified: 2026-03

Top state income tax rate6.4% ⚠️
Combined sales tax7.49% ⚠️
SS / retirement taxationpartially exempt
Minimum wage$7.25/hr ⚠️
Tipped minimum wage$2.13/hr ⚠️
Cost of living index (MERIC)91.6
Property tax circuit breaker (students)Generalmente no per studenti non proprietari; agevolazioni per anziani/disabili
Major banks with branchesTruist, South State, Wells Fargo

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.