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Secondary education

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

How much for lunch?

34 replies

longdiling · 12/09/2016 08:29

Just that really! Dd spent nearly a fiver the first day, too much for me to sustain. Especially with her brother starting in a couple of years too which would make it a tenner a day! So I've asked her to stick to £3. She seems to be eating well enough on that but her friends allegedly don't have budgets....what does everyone else do?!

OP posts:
littledrummergirl · 12/09/2016 20:36

I haven't topped my younger dc up yet. They have packed lunch.
Ds1 has been topped up. He is further from home. His school have a minimum top up of £20Shock so he has to make it last until Christmas!

AlwaysLatte · 07/09/2021 14:54

We set an upper limit of £7 a day but they rarely use it (but it's there if they occasionally want to treat a friend). It averages out about £5-6 which includes a drink and croissant or similar at break, plus a drink and hot meal at lunch time. DS13 has been asking for packed lunches recently though as it's a bit of a pain to queue up and lose a lot of time.

AlwaysLatte · 07/09/2021 14:57

The system one boy uses is a credit card type lunch card, and the other boy uses is a small key fob - both pre loaded. Youngest eats a lot less than the older one!

1happyhippie · 07/09/2021 15:02

I’ve two dc in secondary and I put £15 a week each on their cards. So £3 per day.
They take something from home for break and a bottle of water.
Dd1 often takes a roll or wrap in so doesn’t really spend much.
Dd2 however used to over spend each day. Her record was over £8 in one day on rubbish!
Once the novelty wore off she began to see how it should be spent.

PatriciaHolm · 07/09/2021 17:16

My 6ft 1 15 year old son can easily spend £4/£5, especially on a rugby day. On the flip side 17 year old DD often takes a salad and might buy a drink, or a cookie so only £1 or so and not that every day! They both tend to take water in from home though.

I think they all go a bit loopy to start with because of the novelty factor, but it did calm down.

(just checked for today and they've spent £3.40 and £2.85.)

Hellocatshome · 07/09/2021 17:18

£3 is generous. My two are at different secondary schools. DS1 always spends £2.20 for that he gets a main course and a pudding, he takes his own water bottle. DS2 spends between £1.50 and £2 he normally gets a sandwich or a wrap and a biscuit, he also takes his own water.

BeaLola · 08/09/2021 00:03

DS school have a fob that you load - he takes his own drinks. As a rule of thumb we allow £4 a day

You can see exactly what is spent , at what time - in year 7 first few weeks he was a tad silly on choices , now just starting year 9 he is better - some weeks we end up with £10-£12 left at end of week, other weeks he spends the majority and we have £1-3 left as balance

Before covid his day was out by 06:45 and back around 16:45 apart from the 2 days when he did school activities afterwards - then he was getting home between 17:30-18;00

elkiedee · 08/09/2021 23:14

My kids' secondary uses Parentpay and has a canteen. There is a set meal option that seems like reasonable value at £2.20 a day, but it's a bit limited. We live in an area with fairly high free school meal entitlements and as far as I can tell it's done in a reasonable way so students can't tell who's on FSM. However, there is a snack kiosk at break. For a lot of last year this wasn't running so it probably helped to save money.

I'm hoping to get some paid work as I was hoping to do 18 months ago but at the moment we're living on one not particularly high wage but above FSM and means tested benefits, and we have quite low housing costs as I bought more than 20 years ago so before several waves of house price inflation. So it's reassuring to see that other parents worry about the possibilities of very open ended spending at lunch.

I worry that outsourced contracts for secondary school catering means that private companies want to make up what they can charge for the main options by all the possible extra snacks and drinks and treats, and I'm very sceptical that claims of healthy eating policies and this private catering are compatible.

Also my boys have two very generous aunts - one of my sisters is in quite a well paid job and when I freaked about school meal costs and my struggles to afford back in 2019 she started putting money in for DS1's extras on top of the basic school lunch, and has increaed the amount to cover DS2 as well. During the pandemic we've used the money for their favourite fruits and a few other treats when they weren't in school, and for snacks they could take in when the kiosk wasn't open.

For the moment they will get their meals and I will give them the chance to spend their aunt's money on some extras, because I don't want them getting too hungry, especially on the days when they now have an extended school day. But we've also talked about continuing with some portable and reasonable value from the supermarket, If when I am topping up Parentpay I find DS1 is taking in extras and spending £4 or £5 every day I will question it, but as my sister's being so kind I will actually try and make sure we're doing what she intended.

On drinks, DS1's spending at school is often just on bottled water, but I do think if kids have to get separate drinks it's an encouragement to choose less healthy options with a lot of sugar. At their primary,, there was a water jug on every table in the dining room, and I think that's a better way to encourage healthy habits, plus environmentally better and then the money for meals can go further on actual food, which is good when schools have a lots of kids on FSM and many of the families who don't quality might be no better off, just low waged work, high childcare and private rented housing costs etc.

nevvamynd · 10/09/2021 14:29

I give DS (y8) the price of a meal deal (£3) plus a bit extra (£3.50 in total) so he can budget for occasional treats. He takes water, so I discourage him from getting expensive bottled drinks. I top up the account weekly, and let him know how much to budget for each day. He finds it manageable. If he goes over its usually because he's got hungry and bought a sandwich for a morning snack as well as a lunchtime meal. I get an alert if the balance drops below £5 so I can top it up.

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