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Is a £130-140 a week after rent and bills enough to 'live on'?

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  • rageagainstessays
    rageagainstessays Posts: 2,147 Forumite
    edited 23 June 2013 at 7:22PM
    I forgot to include my other costs in the prior calculations.
    Can someone check my maths please- I've reworked it including things like emergency money and this is what I've come up with-
    Loans and Gifts totalling £11,927 (+ a possible £1250 excellence bursary which is not included in cacls)
    minus
    Accommodation costs of £4866.00
    Phone costs of (£21x12)= £252
    Other costs, sort of emergency money (£40x12)= £480
    Health and Dental costs of approx £10 p.m (to be put aside)= £120

    So thats an income of £11,927 minus fixed costs of £5718= £6209, which when divided by the 52 weeks of the year leaves me with £119 a week, which I'll add another £52 to my income and make it £120 a week.
    “Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral. ”
    ― Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed
  • Tombo
    Tombo Posts: 999 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Combo Breaker
    That sort of budget sounds heavenly, you're lucky!
    2008 Wins: The Shapes - Get Your Learn On (CD), Free transport to and from a Christmas Party
    2009 Wins: Years Supply of Orbit Complete (144 packets), £50 of Odeon vouchers
    2018 Wins: Rockstar Energy Drink Headphones
    :jDebt-Free Wannabe!! :j
  • Fag_ash_lil
    Fag_ash_lil Posts: 5,150 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture
    samc1234 wrote: »
    I forgot to include my other costs in the prior calculations.
    Can someone check my maths please- I've reworked it including things like emergency money and this is what I've come up with-
    Loans and Gifts totalling £11,927 (+ a possible £1250 excellence bursary which is not included in cacls)
    minus
    Accommodation costs of £4866.00
    Phone costs of (£21x12)= £252
    Other costs, sort of emergency money (£40x12)= £480
    Health and Dental costs of approx £10 p.m (to be put aside)= £120

    So thats an income of £11,927 minus fixed costs of £5718= £6209, which when divided by the 52 weeks of the year leaves me with £119 a week, which I'll add another £52 to my income and make it £120 a week.

    I've double checked your maths .

    I make it the same amount as you .

    I am presuming you are staying in " halls " for the 1st year . So that's why you haven't got any bills ?

    If you can manage to save a little each week it will help to get you in the swing of budgeting .

    Then the 2nd year won't hit you too hard once you have to start paying bills etc if you end up house sharing .

    Hope all goes well for you . What course are you hoping to do ?
    " When I'm good I'm very good , but when I'm bad I'm better " ~ Mae West ..
  • Poppy9
    Poppy9 Posts: 18,833 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Combo Breaker
    Blooming hell that sounds a fortune. DD off to uni in Sept and she will have much less than that to live on a week!
    :) ~Laugh and the world laughs with you, weep and you weep alone.~:)
  • CKhalvashi
    CKhalvashi Posts: 12,134 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    I agree that this is a lot.

    I had 2 small children, and we both worked full-time through Uni, and managed to survive on £80ish a week.

    In fairness, we were studying in a country where a bottle of vodka is £1, and cigarettes were about 80p a pack, but living costs in general weren't that much lower.

    CK
    💙💛 💔
  • I've double checked your maths .

    I make it the same amount as you .

    I am presuming you are staying in " halls " for the 1st year . So that's why you haven't got any bills ?

    If you can manage to save a little each week it will help to get you in the swing of budgeting .

    Then the 2nd year won't hit you too hard once you have to start paying bills etc if you end up house sharing .

    Hope all goes well for you . What course are you hoping to do ?

    I'm hoping to save for my deposit on a rented house for the second year so I don't have to go begging to mum and dad.
    and Philosophy :)
    “Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral. ”
    ― Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed
  • Cycrow
    Cycrow Posts: 2,639 Forumite
    thats more than alot of working people have available.

    When i was at uni i had to survive of a loan of less than £4000 a year, and that included £1500 tuition fees to pay
  • zugzwang
    zugzwang Posts: 520 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary 500 Posts
    On the dole (JSA), you'd get £56.80 per week or £71.70 when you're over 25. And you still have bills to pay out of that!

    So you should be able to save.

    With a Philosophy degree, your ability to earn later may be limited. Presumably, you are funded by loans which are linked to inflation and you only pay if/when you start to earn decent money?

    But anyway I don't recommend trying to save every penny because I hope you enjoy uni. A little money spent on whatever should go a long way.
  • rageagainstessays
    rageagainstessays Posts: 2,147 Forumite
    edited 24 June 2013 at 10:14AM
    zugzwang wrote: »
    On the dole (JSA), you'd get £56.80 per week or £71.70 when you're over 25. And you still have bills to pay out of that!

    So you should be able to save.

    With a Philosophy degree, your ability to earn later may be limited. Presumably, you are funded by loans which are linked to inflation and you only pay if/when you start to earn decent money?

    But anyway I don't recommend trying to save every penny because I hope you enjoy uni. A little money spent on whatever should go a long way.

    I'm not really sure one could describe the earning potential as 'limited', the average graduate salary at this university for this course is £17,000 after 6 months, which comparably is pretty good- I'd say.
    “Washing one's hands of the conflict between the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not to be neutral. ”
    ― Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed
  • zugzwang
    zugzwang Posts: 520 Forumite
    Tenth Anniversary 500 Posts
    samc1234 wrote: »
    I'm not really sure one could describe the earning potential as 'limited', the average graduate salary at this university for this course is £17,000 after 6 months, which comparably is pretty good- I'd say.

    Philosophy is not the most marketable degree- unless you can combine it with something else like Business Studies.
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