Am I being unrealistic?
Author
Discussion

Georgiegirl

Original Poster:

869 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
quotequote all
The boy and I are moving in together, and we've found a place we both love but everybody we speak to seems to think we won't be able to afford it. We know its at the very top end of what we think we can afford, but I'd be interested to hear if you think I'm being unrealistic! Sorry if this all sounds very naive, but I've only ever rented a room and paid 'all in'.

We take home £2300 a month between us, the rent is 600 a month, council tax band A. We are estimating on spending just over £1000 a month on rent, council tax, electricity, heating, insurance, and food. We've got furniture, so nothing to pay out there. We probably won't have sky or a landline. Neither of us have any debts. I'll be running a car, and him a motorbike.

What haven't I considered? I know we are stretching it, and we won't exactly be loaded after all the bills are paid but I think we can just do it?

Thank you smile

Funk

26,951 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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I would say that's a pretty realistic budget if you don't include food. What about TV licence? Water?

Edited by Funk on Thursday 4th March 14:08

Georgiegirl

Original Poster:

869 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
quotequote all
TV Licence is about 10 a month if I have remembered the ad correctly? I don't know how much to estimate for water a month? Thanks for your help, I am aware I probably sound a right idiot!

robsartain

144 posts

196 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Just rough estimates and depends where in the country you live, etc... Also Im guessing its a two up two down kind of house. Rough prices per month

Rent - £600
Council tax - £100
Gas/Electric - £75
TV Licence - £12
House Insurance - £35

Water - £40
Food - Depends how lardy you are :-)

The big ones I think you missed is water bill and food. Mine was about £400 a year and I went on a water meter and its loads cheaper.

So based on that you can afford it but remember non house related stuff:-

Car Tax, MOT and Car Insurance, Travel to and from work, Clothes and you have to have a social life.

cs02rm0

13,816 posts

209 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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It doesn't seem unreasonable to me, doesn't even seem like you're stretching much.

anonymous-user

72 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Comparing that to what me & my mrs paid on our first house it will be a complete piece of piss! Not even stretching, our motgage back then was much more than the rent you will be paying and our income was way lower.

Georgiegirl

Original Poster:

869 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
quotequote all
Yeah we are both a couple of porkers so food will be high, although I hear Iceland do some lovely stuff for a fiver wink

Its got a water meter so thats good - I've been informed showers will be strictly timed and after 3 minutes he's flushing the toilet to scald me out!!

Car and bike both have MOT, tax, and insurance until next Jan so I might take the well practised 'worry about that when the time comes' route. He can walk to work, mine is about 5 miles away so bikeable in summer.

Its a 2 1/2 bed flat by the sea in Norfolk, so not a particularly expensive area but not cheap either - middle of the road I guess!

Its probably second nature after a while, but at the moment there seems so much to think about!

Really appreciate all the replies.

robsartain

144 posts

196 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Well you don`t want to end up like Kerrie Katona, look what happened to her after she went to Iceland... :-)

I think you will be fine, I find you always manage to survive somehow !!

Without worrying you further I assume both jobs are safe ? and if you did drop down to one salary you could still afford it ?

Georgiegirl

Original Poster:

869 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Hell no, if either of us lose jobs we are screwed! Luckily I think we are both as safe as we could be in the current climate - he works in NHS admissions (handy chap to know) and I'm a civil servant working for Defra (alas not one of the fat cat ones, hence the thread) so that explains the relatively low income but hopefully quite secure.

I'm sure if it came to it our parents wouldn't see us on the streets but I absolutely don't want to enter into it with that attitude, I want to be independent!

fido

18,007 posts

273 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Cut down on food, or replace it with cereals and stuff that makes you full but not fat.

Georgiegirl

Original Poster:

869 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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It was a joke....but thanks for the advice wink

I'll just do what I do now - wear clothes with big pockets when visiting the parents. I once managed to secrete two packets of hot cross buns and a loaf of bread in a particularly voluminous dress!

Duke Thrust

1,680 posts

257 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Looks perfectly reasonable to me, go for it and have fun - it'll be good practice for when you decide to buy and commit to a mortgage.

One thing though, have you considered moving costs? Always mroe than you think, even if it's just renting a van and getting chums around to help (tea, pizza's etc)


Georgiegirl

Original Poster:

869 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
quotequote all
Woah steady, I can't even think about mortgages without coming out in a cold sweat! Better set aside another hundred quid for moving costs cheers - the first month is going to be a tough one!

dirty boy

14,791 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Georgiegirl said:
Yeah we are both a couple of porkers so food will be high, although I hear Iceland do some lovely stuff for a fiver wink

Its got a water meter so thats good - I've been informed showers will be strictly timed and after 3 minutes he's flushing the toilet to scald me out!!

Car and bike both have MOT, tax, and insurance until next Jan so I might take the well practised 'worry about that when the time comes' route. He can walk to work, mine is about 5 miles away so bikeable in summer.

Its a 2 1/2 bed flat by the sea in Norfolk, so not a particularly expensive area but not cheap either - middle of the road I guess!

Its probably second nature after a while, but at the moment there seems so much to think about!

Really appreciate all the replies.
Don't know Norfolk council tax prices, but band A will certainly be about £100.

I pay £16 for water and £18 for sewerage in a band A.

I think you'll be fine.

Whereabouts in Norfolk by the sea are you going? Presumably he'll be at the Paget?

Shaw Tarse

31,817 posts

221 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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You can save money by meal planning, only buy what you need.
Sunday roast chicken (ideally count the potatoes, carrots etc)
Monday lunch chicken sarnies.
Monday tea, jacket pots,filled with chicken
Tues some sort of soup.

miniman

28,606 posts

280 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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I used to pay a bigger mortgage than that on half the take home so I can't see how you'd have a problem. Even if your basic living costs get to £1500, what are you going to spend the rest on?

Dan_1981

17,791 posts

217 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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You'll cope fine - the missus and I had similar costs and incomes when we bought a couple of years ago.

Every so often it can be struggle when things crop up but by the by you'll do fine.

Georgiegirl

Original Poster:

869 posts

227 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Dirty Boy - Thanks for vote of confidence smile yes he's at the Paget, he'd like to get into the Police though, but I don't know how they will feel about him being ex military. The flat is right on the seafront in south Gorleston so its quite nice, better than most of Gorleston and much better than Great Yarmouth!! Are you a local?
Shaw Tarse - thanks for the tip, we'll definitely be meal planning I know how easy it is to spend more than you planned when you don't plan and just buy stuff as and when you fancy it. He'll be doing most of the cooking though!!(My role is spider removal and burglar clubbing)
ajstephe - thanks for the info, always helpful to get an idea of what others actually spend! I take it the costs you've given are split between the two of you not each??
Miniman - clothes, going out, general stuff I don't need but want?!
Dan 1981 - Cheers smile

I really am quite ridiculously excited to have my own(ish) place!

shirt

24,533 posts

219 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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miniman said:
I used to pay a bigger mortgage than that on half the take home so I can't see how you'd have a problem. Even if your basic living costs get to £1500, what are you going to spend the rest on?
agreed. my take home when i bought a house was just shy of 1500 and my mortgage was 730. i still ran a car (250miles a week commute plus 100quid a mth toll fees + 800miles per mth visiting the oh. granted, month end was tight but i managed.

you'll cover it easily. your food bill wont be that much more and he'll the only one who notices the increase on the phone and heating bills wink everything else (bar c/tax) will be more or less what you pay now.


wiffmaster

2,615 posts

216 months

Thursday 4th March 2010
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Georgiegirl said:
I'm a civil servant working for Defra (alas not one of the fat cat ones, hence the thread)
Oi! Where's our Single Farm Payment got to? Tell your bosses they need to pull their finger out! hehe