Thanks for the statistic. It was actually helpful. In the back of my mind I always consider our income average since I stay home and don't contribute monetarily. So - even though he brings home a nice salary we support our family on an average salary for a family of 5, albeit average for 2 working parents...
The average annual salary for individual workers is £26,000 per year and the average annual household income in the UK is about £33,000 a year... your husband is going to be earning more than double this amount.
- 90% of the UK population earns less than £45,000 per year
- 95% earns less than £61,000 per year
- approx. 98% earns less than £70,000 per year
My parents raised 3 kids in the UK (not in London) on about £35,000 a year. They own a 5-bedroom home in the suburbs (south-west England) and they have put all 3 of us through university, plus paid for all of my brothers' sports training and competitions over the years (one brother is a former international gymnast, the other is a badminton player).
My estimate for utilities was for renters insurance, gas, electric, water, tv, phone and internet all together.
I live on my own in a 2-bedroom house (about 120 miles north of London) and my current monthly expenses come to:
Rent: £450
Council tax: £75 (it is only paid 10 months a year though)
Renter's Insurance: £5 (covering house contents worth up to £5,000)
Electricity and gas: £50
Water: £20
Broadband internet (10 mb), phone line and satellite TV (with HD box and equivalent of TIVO): £40
Food: £120
Transport: £50
Total = £810 per month.
Obviously, in London and with a family of five, you'll be spending more than this, but I can't see your basic utilities (electricity, gas, water) being all that much more, so it's really going to be your rent/council tax that hikes it up.