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Is a £130-140 a week after rent and bills enough to 'live on'?
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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 Oppressed0 -
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 Party2009 Wins: Years Supply of Orbit Complete (144 packets), £50 of Odeon vouchers
2018 Wins: Rockstar Energy Drink Headphones:jDebt-Free Wannabe!! :j
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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 ..0 -
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.~:)
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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💙💛 💔0 -
Fag_ash_lil wrote: »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 Oppressed0 -
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 pay0 -
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.0 -
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 Oppressed0 -
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.0
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