The cost of raising a child

Every parent knows children are a drain on their resources - mental and financial. But exactly how much do the little dears cost to bring up? And are they value for money? (let's not go there ...)
  
  


Whether or not Philip Larkin had a point about the impact that parents have on their kids, the one unanswerable fact is that parents also pay a high price for the privilege - and it's going up all the time.

Handily, if you want to put an actual figure on all those years of joy, love and temper-tantrums, LV= (the insurance and investment group formerly known as Liverpool Victoria) comes up with an annual calculation of the total cost of bringing up a child right the way from birth until they finish university. Parents of a sensitive disposition, look away now.

Because surprise, surprise, LV='s most recent "Cost Of A Child" survey (read it at lv.com/media_centre/press_releases/cost) revealed that each little darling is costing us more than ever - on average, £186,032 from the day they are born up to their 21st birthday. Which translates to £8,859 a year, £738 a month or, gulp, £24.30 a day.

Of course, if you privately educate your child you'll be needing to add rather more to that total -an extra £72,957 (£130,557 if she or he goes to a boarding school), taking the total cost of raising one child over the quarter-of-a-million mark.

Even without these schooling figures, the total estimated cost of a child has, since the survey began in 2003, increased by 33%. By 2012, it is predicted that we will be shelling out more than £12,500 a year for each child we conceive and raise. As forms of contraception go, it's not bad.

How the 'Cost Of A Child' survey works out its overall total and the average annual cost of different age groups compared

Total cost of bringing up a child in different regions of Britain

· Have you got any top tips for keeping the cost of kids under control? Tell us now at blogs.theguardian.com/money

 

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