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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think it's going to be a struggle to send DC to university now?

201 replies

coffeerevelsrule · 16/10/2022 15:37

DC a couple of years off this now but it's beginning to worry me nonetheless.

My finances are as follows: I'm divorced and earn about £52k. Ex husband contributes nothing and I have to pay him £10k when youngest child reaches 21 as part of our divorce settlement. I have just over £21k in savings. I usually manage to save about £100-£200 per month - this is quite a bit less than a couple of years ago just due to rising costs and having to replace my car when it died last year. My mortgage is currently just under £700 per month and I also have about £5k other debts (low - 0 interest - unavoidable at the time).

Martin Lewis website said last time I checked that I should expect to contribute about £7k per child per year. This would have been a struggle anyway but now looks pretty much impossible. My mortgage is fixed for another couple of years and my fuel until next year. Both will rise massively just as dd1 is due to go to uni. What the fuck will happen?

AIBU to think that if inflation/interest rates stay like this they are going to have to look again at the thresholds for parental contributions but AIalsoBU to say they won't and university is going to become unaffordable for many?

OP posts:
geraniumsandsunshine · 18/10/2022 19:05

Underscore21 · 16/10/2022 15:51

Lots of undergraduates live at home nowadays and attend local Universities, your DC may have to do this.

It's a bit sad that my youngest is less than a year and I am worrying about this! I do live in a university city with a law and med school as well as the usual humanities and science courses so looks like if they want to go to uni, I will encourage them to stay here.

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