Starmer And The Southpost Triple...
News1 min ago
Hi all
Me and my girlfriend (soon to be wife in october) are planning for the future and would like kids in 3-4years time and was wondering around how much (if we are sensible with clothes etc) we would be looking at spending a month on 1 child??
I would like them as soon as possible but the money side of thing is obviously worrying as if we can't afford it what would we do. Its mainly the first 2years I am worried about as after this I should be able to earn a good wage. We have decided that my girlfriend would be staying at home to look after the kids as this is what she wants also, so this would mean we would not need child care.
So how much a month would you say?
Thanks in advance for your help.
No best answer has yet been selected by Deano1983. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.hello, well depends upon you really. If you have no objection to buying second hand baby equipment, clothes etc then you'll scarcely notice the difference in the first couple of years. If however you want everything shiny new and up to the minute then you can look at roughly the following as my wife had a baby last week and we've bought all new stuff since the stuff from our previous kids was a bit tired now.
For a cot, moses basket, bedding, adequate amount of clothes for the next 2 months, car seat and buggy/pram we spent not much more than �1,000. We could have probably halved this at least had we gone for the cheapest of everything, possibly even less.
If your wife breast feeds then that's free, can't help you with milk costs as we've never bought it, I daresay someone else can help you there though. we always cook the same food for our babies as we do for ourselves and puree it, so no baby food costs and it's better for them ( don't add salt though).Baby food costs again can't help you with.
Until they are 2 years old there are very few additional costs, it's after about 5 they get expensive:)
At the end of the day you will manage, it's a very subjective thing to work out but money isn't everything and babies don't give a hoot about it , nor do they need much really, just love, security, clean clothes and somewhere safe to sleep and travel in, and you've done it.
Good luck to you both.
we have forgotten the nappies, the desposables quite frankly Boots own are ok and you are looking at about �5 a week as a rough guide. Then baby wipes at �2 a pack, these are often on a buy 1 get one free offer.
Then other additions such as nappy bags yo depose � 1 for about 50 bags, Calpol for teething etc. comes in at about � 2 a bottle. (or free on prescription)
As for clothes, even if you don't want second hand ones, Tesco and Adsa alone would clothe a child from new for very little. (you could do it from around � 20 a clothes size i.e. 0-3 months, 3-6 month)
Nappies and baby wipes yeah I did forget those as we don't use disposables etc.We use traditional nappies not much more work and a hell of a lot cheaper and more eco friendly, nor do we use baby wipes. We buy a 99p bottle of aloe juice from holland and barratt and dilute it down about 1 part that to 9 parts water and soak flannels in it, your baby never gets nappy rash ( aloe is brilliant) and a bottle of that lasts about a month. You can soak them and stick them inside a waterproof container when your going out as well with no hassle.Hol5 is right Asda for cheaper new clothes than almost anywhere else, but the main thing is don't worry and enjoy your baby:)
if you are not too proud to have second hand stuff you can cut the cost quite a lot and lots of people will pass stuff on if they know you wont be offended ,kids grow out of stuff so quickly if we had waited till we could afford them we would never have had ours, first one was an accident and once we had 1 we found we managed so we had another, must admit we never had disposable nappies and as for baby wipes a few good old fashioned flannels did the job kids dont need everything new and shiney as long as they are clean and well loved you wont go far wrong good luck
we have three and some months if you bulk buy for nappies we spent nothing at all except for food of course. at the begining i was given cot, clothes and breast fed so nearly nothing. used a sling instead of a pram, then bought a push chair in the sales. didnt have a car then so no car seat. shop in charity shops and ebay and never be too proud to accept things. if you have more than one then the clothes can be handed down.
my eldest is 10 now and I'm only just having to buy clothes for her as the supplies from family and friends is finally running out. thank goodness for child benefit and tax crdits.
I am afraid that kids do not come cheap but you do reap the benefits. We were in exactly the same position, we both worked full time and earned half decent wages, after having our son I was off for 6 months maternity. The first 10 weeks were fine as I received full wages but then I took a drastic drop for the remainder. We were lucky that my parents bought a lot of things as he was their first grandchild but even so it was tough going. Cannot give an exact figure or even estimate but you have got to bear in mind there are nappies, wipes, bottles, milk, creams, bibs etc and they are on a monthly basis. However, looking on the positive side ( at last!) it does not matter how much money you have or don't have you will always be able to make things meet and your top priority will be your new baby, as long as he/she has everything you really won't care about anything else. Sorry cannot give any figures but everything varies in price.
Good luck for the future and hope this helps a bit.
You'ev got a massive posh-sounding house. If you can afford to keep that on just your own salary, why are you worried about money? If you really want a baby, you could always downsize to somewhere with, perhaps, only 3 bathrooms??
Sorry to sound sarcastic, but there are a lot of people a lot worse off than you who manage perfectly well to have children and keep them in food and clothes.