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Would you be this frugal for two years for this endgame?

84 replies

pinkponie · 15/02/2026 08:27

So dh and I were talking and we need a bigger property due to an unexpected third dc. We have a v small 3 bedroom flat but there’s 8 years in between dc 1&3 (dc2 is opposite gender and his box room is so tiny, getting a single bed in was a struggle). It wouldn’t be idea, for dc 1&3 to share long term as dc1 would be a teenager when dc3 is five. She will need her own space for stuff etc. I guess it could be done but our living areas were getting too small for 4, let alone 5. This property was only meant to be for a few years anyway (been here 3) but house prices shot up round here since then, it’s crazy. Even if ours went up at the same rate, we’d still be £200k+ behind actual houses and that’s for a three bed. We can’t currently afford that. Dh crunched the numbers and said that if we live on £850 a month for the next two years then we can save about £50k which would obviously be very helpful. This also means separately to that we could pay off our flat in two years. So our cash in bank to put towards a next property would be around £250k. We’re in Scotland which means that we’d need approx £40k for the offers over value (if you don’t know, basically up here if so etching is worth say £300k, you’d be
paying 10-20% over that out of pocket, you can’t mortgage that extra % as it’s over the value of the property).

So it’d be £250k we’d have but probably £200k for a deposit on a property after over value and solicitors fees etc. But it means that for anything post bills, we’d have £850 a month. This needs to include food, nappies, fuel (don’t use a lot of fuel to be fair). Any entertainment. We’d have already paid for kids clubs and streaming services as part of our bills, this is separate to the £850. We worked out that means we would have the money for one fun activity a month such as soft play/inflatable world etc. We do have lots of really good parks a short drive away although the weather is unpredictable at best Grin. We currently spend about £350 each on the two older dc at Christmas but dh reckons we’d need to reign it in to closer to £200. Birthdays are about £200 each, so trying to get closer to £100 etc.

I guess I’m asking if it’s worth being frugal for two years with the dc at the ages that they are (9,7, baby) or if this will be too tight? We’ve also agreed that we will do a one week holiday abroad a year. I feel bad that Christmas and birthdays will be less as well as just day to day entertainment etc. Of course they won’t go without anything but it’ll be all clothes off Vinted kind of stuff (not slating it, both mine and baby’s wardrobes are 100% Vinted purchases). Would you do this or would it be too hard? Thank you for any replies.

OP posts:
Dairymilkisminging · 15/02/2026 10:58

I think its doable. Take advantage of free things like parks for days out take a picnic/pack lunch. Deffo things like charity shops for clothes (I like vinted but when buying lots of small things postage eats up alot of the budget)
Food shopping you have to get creative. Lots of low cost meals ect.
I would do it because in the long run you'll be so much better off also when the time comes to sell the house will have gone up again so makes sense to suffer a short time now especially when kids are little.
I wouldn't do a holiday but thats me if its important to you do it.

notatinydancer · 15/02/2026 11:04

I would absolutely cut out the holidays.
Also you could find a job to work round when your husband is home. If you did that and saved even £500 a month you’d get to goal so much quicker.

IAmKerplunk · 15/02/2026 11:05

Congratulations on your surprise baby 💐

I would definitely do what you are planning - really wish I had thought like that and done it. I see friends who have done similar and for the sake of a few years stripping right back - I think it is worth it. Plus you will be so used to stripping right back that hopefully once your dc are teens and costing a lot more and you are back at work you will be able to relax a bit but also save more than you do now. Go for it - and please come back in 2 years with all your hints and tips and prove that it is possible

USSAthena · 15/02/2026 11:51

Sheesh. I have 2 teenage DC and they get max £150 at Christmas and always have!

You could be even more frugal and get this achieved in 18-months. Especially if you find a way to earn more money as well as cut costs.

hyggetyggedotorg · 15/02/2026 12:01

Yes I would. I think short term will be fine. Your baby can share with you for quite a while - the whole 2 years is pretty usual. It’ll be worth it to not have to work out how to give a 15 year old studying for exams & a 7 year old who wants to play/watch TV separate rooms later on.

Alternatively (and I’m sure you’ve considered this), is it worth moving out of the city to get more for your money?

pinkponie · 15/02/2026 12:02

Thank you so much @IAmKerplunk🥹

Made £15 off Vinted this morning so that’s a start 😂

OP posts:
pinkponie · 15/02/2026 12:14

If we live off the £850 a month, we can save £2100 a month. Over 24 months, that’s £50400, plus any interest. What are we going to have to reduce? We do a few zoo/aquarium/soft play trips a month, plus don’t think about budgets when food shopping. So we’d need to have the paid outing as a monthly treat and budget carefully for food. We’d need to cut back on Christmas and birthday budgets. Potentially forego any holidays. Will think of what else.

OP posts:
EleanorReally · 15/02/2026 17:01

plenty of websites with budget family meals op, including bbc good food

Pearlyb · 16/02/2026 00:13

Yes I would definitely do this!

We did similar years ago, and I'm so thankful that we did. The house we have now works so much better for us, and for short term pain the long term gain has been immense.

I can't remember how much we exactly lived off, but we cut absolutely everything to the bone for just over two years. No holidays, social life was inviting people over (or going to theirs), twice a year haircuts, no new clothes unless absolutely needed, personal spending money in general less than £100 per adult per month, nothing new for the house (and I mean nothing!), kids entertainment was going to the parks for picnic or just walks, few times may have gone to cheap midweek cinema during winter breaks but took own snacks, present spend was nominal, etc etc. We really scrimped every penny!

When I look back to those times I remember it being hard in terms of having to wait so long, but we were still happy and made things work.

Just power through, and your future self will 100% thank you!

Pearlyb · 16/02/2026 00:15

And while the initial adjustment may be harder, it really does get easier as time goes by and you get used to it. And it's great seeing the bank balance grow!!

massinsaln · 16/02/2026 00:22

850 a month for food, fuel and entertainment is not frugal ime. I've lived on far less with my family forever and it's fine. I did it to get a 3-bed house, same as you the box room is tiny, so we've continued living like this to work towards getting an extension. I used cloth nappies and breastfed so some savings there, but I've managed to fit in IVF and regular reflexology on this budget.

Growlybear83 · 16/02/2026 00:32

We lived extremely frugally when we moved to our current house 34 years ago. I was six months pregnant and we moved to a near derelict five bedroom house with a large overgrown garden, knowing that I would be giving up work to stay home with our baby. We didn’t have a holiday for five years, we didn’t have new cars, no new clothes, and we were very careful with the food we bought. We ate out maybe twice a year, takeaways were a luxury, and our social life revolved around friends coming to our house for the evening or is going round to see friends because we couldn’t afford nights out in the pub easily. We had a large mortgage for the time, and interest rates were still around 12%. It took us about eight years to finish renovating the house and I went back to work at about that time. But it was 100% worth it and we never regretted it for a minute.

Blondeshavemorefun · 16/02/2026 00:40

yes doable if that is after bills. Many survive on less and it’s for a good reason

tho why can’t you find a weekend /evening job to earn even a little extra dl help the budget

Silverbirchleaf · 16/02/2026 03:35

Seems tight. Food is surely close to £600 per month?

As others have suggested, ditch the overseas holiday.

Jellycatspyjamas · 16/02/2026 07:41

Where are you in Scotland that there’s a £200k difference between flats and houses in the same area? I think your savings are doing a lot of heavy lifting if you’re both going to save £50k and pay off your flat. Have you also accounted for LBTT (stamp duty)?

In saying that £850 sounds like a random amount to decide to live on. Have you checked that pulling in your belt to that extent is possible. What if the car needs serviced or the kids all need shoes in the same month? I’m all for living frugally but you need to be sure it’s manageable or you’ll get resentful and stressed. I’d start with working out what you’re living costs are now, and what you can reduce or eliminate and see what that leaves you with.

Of course it’s worth living frugally to get the right house, but really do your detailed calculations both what you can save and what you’ll need to have in savings.

redskyAtNigh · 16/02/2026 07:52

I think your main problem will be that it's a huge difference to your current lifestyle.
Children those ages will be perfectly happy with parks / outside activities / free or cheap community things and play at home, but you've got used to regular zoo/aquarium/soft play trips so there will be an adjustment. It would be worth thinking about how you frame this to your older two.

As a SAHM this will potentially be hardest on you - are you happy to entertain yourself and the children on not much money? Will you be able to explain to friends that you'd like to meet at home or in the park with a flask, rather than going out for coffee (if that's something you do, obviously!)

I would be clear about what you are happy to spend money and and what you should not. Decent quality shoes for the children rather than something cheap? Those non-free baby groups?

GiantTeddyIsTired · 16/02/2026 07:57

TBH, I'm comfortable, and normally only spend your budget amount on my (much older) kids at Christmas and birthdays, and our 'foreign' holiday is a week in french Centerparcs - so yeah, I could manage it for 2 years if that's bills/food already accounted for.

leaflikebrew · 16/02/2026 08:00

Post bills?

That's loads of money ... in fact we live on less permanently.

user1492757084 · 16/02/2026 08:04

Do it. For two years it is bearable.
Your children will never remember it.
You will be in a better place.

Call it an adventure.
Cut each other's hair, grow vegetables together, alter second hand clothes and see it as a holiday from consumerism.

DuchessofReality · 16/02/2026 08:15

What do you currently spend/save per month? I am sure you aren’t spending that extra £2k at the moment. So the question isn’t really ‘if we only spend 850 we can save 2k per month’ it must actually be ‘if we only spend 850 we can save an extra 500 per month’ or whatever the numbers are.

DaisyChain505 · 16/02/2026 08:32

It’s not really being frugal having £850 to spend on pretty much “fun stuff” each month.

Also you’re spending a lot of money on your children for Christmas and birthdays. No young child needs that amount of money spent on them twice a year just on presents.

InMyOodie · 16/02/2026 08:50

but house prices shot up round here since then, it’s crazy.

If you're in an area where house prices are rising each year, you could find that you aren't in a stronger position with £50k in two years. So if you were looking at a house that is now £500k, in two years it could be £550 or £580k for example.

When houses prices are static, saving for two years would make sense.

Tootiredcantsleep · 16/02/2026 10:01

DaisyChain505 · 16/02/2026 08:32

It’s not really being frugal having £850 to spend on pretty much “fun stuff” each month.

Also you’re spending a lot of money on your children for Christmas and birthdays. No young child needs that amount of money spent on them twice a year just on presents.

This money needs to include food though, for four (soon to be 5) people eating.

You could cut back with food, and budget and meal plan very well, but I doubt you'd get it below 400 quid a month, which would be £2.67 per day each. I suspect that the minimum food spend for you but to be miserable would be nearer £600 a month though.

You also haven't accounted for all the things that add up in a month. From to presents for friends birthday parties, to an emergency outfit for a baby because they've had a toilet accident on it and you forgot to pack a spare, getting delayed and needing to stop at McDonald's on the way home, New shoes for growing kids feet etc.

Then with 2 years, some things are bound to go wrong - the cooker dies, the car dies, the dog eats Christmas chocolates. Unexpected bills etc.

Its very little contingency to pay for that out of the £300ish quid left. It would be ok for a couple of months, but for 2 years straight, if you're not used to it, would be miserable.

Bombinia · 16/02/2026 10:10

The thing is, that if you find it difficult you can just save a bit less and spend a bit more, it's not like you are losing income, so what's to think about? Start doing it, if it's a bit tight then adjust the budget and save a bit less.

CanIRetirePlease · 16/02/2026 10:13

Ditch holidays, do your own haircuts, Vinted for clothes… it’s do-able!

If you set a target even if you don’t quite reach it you’ll be ok