Comparing the Cost of Living: UK vs Australia

Posted on

LondonvsSydneyBudgetDirect Comparing the Cost of Living: UK vs Australia

I’ve been a bit quiet on the Australia front recently, but for regular readers, you’ll know it’s a big dream of ours to eventually get out there. The plan has gone on the back-burner a little since discovering I’m pregnant. It might sound ridiculous, but I feel much more comfortable giving birth here in the UK (this despite the press doing their best to persuade us all that our hospitals are tired and failing). We also received a blow a few months ago regarding our application and it seems neither of us are as desirable as we once thought. The pressure is now on both of us to retrain which means our 3 year plan has now turned into a 10 year one. Sigh…

We are however, constantly researching, plotting, and fantasising about a life down under. Our children will enjoy an outdoor lifestyle, we’ll enjoy a better work / life balance, and the retirement options over there are immeasurably better than here in the UK. Both Craig and I have folders on our laptops filled with useful links and resources, and spreadsheets with recruitment contacts, estate agents and crudely worked-out budgets. So when I spotted a brand new Cost of Living Index from Budget Direct which allows you to compare the cost of living across a range of different factors in major cities throughout the UK, Australia and the US, I immediately bookmarked it.

Interactive tools like this are infinitely helpful as they allow you to visualise how far your money will stretch when the novelty wears off and the hard slog begins. Here in the UK, most of us could say, with no hesitation, how much a half decent bottle of Merlot costs at the supermarket. We all how much our weekly commute sets us back, what we’re paying for broadband and how much cash we’ll need for a night out on the town. But hardly any of us actually know how these costs compare to those in the States or Australia.

Capture2 Comparing the Cost of Living: UK vs Australia

I always imagined most of these things would be cheaper in Australia. They haven’t been hit as hard as us by the global recession and they’ve a growing and prosperous infrastructure. But (amazingly) I’m not always right, and it seems this is the case here.

I popped London, Sydney and Los Angeles into the calculator and was a bit taken aback by the results. I appreciate I’ve picked three of the most expensive cities I could have chosen, but as Sydney is the ultimate dream for us, I wanted to see how it compares to the money pit that is our nation’s capital. Surprising the cost of housing is much the same in London as it is in Sydney, but most utilities are, on average, far more expensive in Sydney. This includes mobile phone contracts and broadband provision which are at least twice as expensive. The only area where the UK prices exceed that of Sydney is in heating, water and electricity - but even here the difference is negligible.

The price of alcohol on a night out is more expensive in Australia, clothing is also considerably more expensive (see below), as are most items you will typically find in your weekly food shop. It’s certainly an eye-opener.

Capture3 Comparing the Cost of Living: UK vs Australia

The only area where the UK blows Australia out of the water is transport. We’ve long known that the UK has ridiculous transport costs with yearly hikes well over the rate of inflation - it’s in the news year upon year. It therefore shouldn’t really come as too much of a surprise that it’s much cheaper to get around in Sydney.

So what does this mean? Well it means we’re a little guilty of wearing rose-tinted spectacles when it comes to Oz. Of course there are much cheaper states to live in than Sydney, and they’ll need to be! Although we’re both convinced we’ll earn more and work slightly fewer hours in Australia, any dreams of us dining out every night and living the life of Riley will have to stay just that - dreams.

If you’re thinking of making a big move, or even just fancy a nosy about what life could be like somewhere new. I thoroughly recommend Budget Direct’s nifty tool. It certainly makes for interesting reading.

Featured Post in association with BudgetDirect.com.au


“Why would you want two in nappies?”

Posted on

It’s no secret that Craig and I are trying for another baby. It’s been 8 months now, and other than our miscarriage in January, nothing. Not one late period, not one faint pink line on a pregnancy test, nothing.

As well as charting, we’ve spent a fortune on ovulation sticks, I’ve been munching away on celery sticks without hummus (I know, I know - sounds horrible right?) in a bid to shed the pounds, and Craig’s ditched his morning coffee. We’ve been getting in plenty of early nights (even after World Wars 3, 4 and 5 over whose turn it is to wash up) and I’ve even taken to downing various homeopathic concoctions that a friends’ sisters’ cousins’ friend insisted helped her when they were trying.

Having just had a appendicitis scare, I informed the the doctor in A&E who was having a poke at my tummy about our baby-making mission. As she had access to some recent ultrasounds pictures that showed I had PCOS on my left ovary, she asked how long we’ve been trying and what, if anything, we’d been doing to boost our chances (presumably in case one too many folic acid tablets had bought on the crippling pain in my lower abdomen). When I spouted off all the things we’d been up to she looked absolutely incredulous, even more so when I tipped her off that Dexter is just 13 months old. Her response, like plenty others we’ve had, was to tell me I was mad and that I might be better waiting.

These sort of comments really get on my nerves. They suggest that Craig and I haven’t really thought through our decision, or are naive to the fact it’ll be hard work having two small children. I didn’t just wake up one morning and say to Craig “It would be quite cool to have another one, don’t you think?” - we’ve discussed it hundreds of times and have hundreds of reasons why we want another baby quickly. It isn’t just the romanticised notion of them playing together and becoming best friends, it also makes financial sense to us as regards childcare choices, work responsibilities, and our plans to move to Australia.

In terms of our plans, I want to have my children here in the UK. Despite much criticism, I think our NHS has a superior approach to ante-natal care and having had Dexter here, I like the idea of knowing what to expect for baby 2. Then, having already made inroads with our plans to emigrate to Australia, it also makes perfect sense to us to get this huge move done before both children reach school age. We feel it’ll be easier to uproot younger children who aren’t already in the school system, and won’t be too traumatized over moving away from the wider family.

As it’s likely that in Australia I’ll be more marketable than Craig in terms of work opportunities, we need to ensure that I won’t be taking anymore maternity leave when I have my feet under a desk. This means we’re keen to get the chaos of the early years over in one fell swoop so I can then dedicate all my attention on my career. Until then, I get to spend lots of time nurturing my babies and enjoying the early years. It all makes perfect sense.

Having two children quickly, for us, has never been in doubt. In fact, we’re so convinced it’s right for us that I refused to talk to a midwife about contraception following Dexter’s birth. Yep, laid up in the recovery ward following my c-section I told her that we’d be trying again as soon as my stitches would allow us to.

We just know that when we find out that baby 2 is safely growing in my tummy that all our hard work will be worth it. Until then, I’ll be keeping my ovulation calculator bookmarked and the bathroom cupboard stocked full of tests and potions. Back-to-back pregnancy might not be for everyone, but it is for us.

Anyone else trying to get conceive at the moment? There’s some really great advice over on What to Expect’s website - everything from secondary infertility, to fertility supplements, to conception myths. It’s well worth a visit if you’re looking for balanced and practical advice about any stage of the parenting life-cycle.

 

 

pixel Why would you want two in nappies?