Budget Planner for Greater London

Budgeting in Greater London starts with understanding what things actually cost here. Greater London has some of the highest living costs in the UK. Rent, transport and childcare are significant expenses for most households. This guide helps you build a realistic budget using straightforward steps, free tools and local context.

This guide is for general information only. It is not financial advice. Free debt help is available from charities and public bodies. Always check fees, terms, and eligibility before using a paid service.

What This Guide Covers

  • How to list your income and outgoings
  • Budgeting methods that work for different situations
  • Cost of living context for Greater London
  • Free tools to help you budget
  • Paid budgeting support and what to check

Practical Steps

Step 1: List all your income

Write down every source of income including wages, benefits, tax credits, child benefit, maintenance payments and any self-employed earnings. Use the actual take-home figure after tax and National Insurance. If your income varies, use a realistic average based on your last three months.

Step 2: List all your regular outgoings

Start with fixed costs: rent or mortgage, council tax, energy, water, broadband, phone, insurance and subscriptions. Then add regular spending on food, transport, childcare, clothing and personal care. Rent in Greater London is among the highest in England. Many boroughs have long waiting lists for social housing. Renters face particular pressure from rising rents and limited affordable options.

Step 3: Work out what is left

Subtract your total outgoings from your income. If the number is negative, you are spending more than you earn and need to look at where to reduce costs or increase income. If it is positive, you have money available to save or pay down debt.

Step 4: Set spending categories

Divide your available money into categories. A simple method is: 50% on needs, 30% on wants and 20% on savings or debt repayment. This is a guide, not a rule — adjust it to what works for your situation.

Step 5: Track and review regularly

A budget only works if you check it. Review your spending once a week or at least once a month. Many banking apps now show spending categories automatically.

Local Context: Greater London

In Greater London, the biggest cost pressures for most households are food costs, energy bills, council tax and especially rent make london one of the most expensive places to live in england. Using a budget helps you see clearly where your money goes and where changes are possible. Transport costs are high in London. Travelcards and Oyster pay-as-you-go help manage costs. Some councils offer travel support for those on low incomes.

Free Support Options

Paid Service Options

Paid service: these may charge a fee. Compare free options first and check the terms before you continue.

Budget Coaching Service

A paid financial coaching service can work through your budget with you one to one. Fees vary. Check what is included, cancellation rights and whether the provider is FCA regulated before you book.

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Before You Pay — Checklist

  • Check whether a free service offers the same help (StepChange, Citizens Advice, MoneyHelper, entitledto, Turn2us)
  • Verify FCA authorisation at register.fca.org.uk for any regulated financial service
  • Get a clear fee agreement in writing — one-off or ongoing?
  • Understand the cancellation policy before you commit
  • Read independent reviews on Trustpilot and Google
  • Be cautious of any service guaranteeing specific results or outcomes

Next Steps

Start with free support. The services listed above are free, experienced and cover all the main options available to you. You do not need to pay to get good financial help.

If you want personalised guidance, Ask Fin can help you work through your situation and point you in the right direction — this is general guidance, not regulated financial advice.

Related Guides for Greater London

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to live in Greater London?

Costs vary across Greater London. Food costs, energy bills, council tax and especially rent make London one of the most expensive places to live in England. The ONS Family Spending Survey provides average household spending data by region, which gives useful context without being a rule.

What is the easiest way to start budgeting?

Start simple. Write down what comes in and what goes out. Use the MoneyHelper Budget Planner for a guided approach. You do not need a spreadsheet — a notebook works fine.

What if I am already in debt?

A budget is still the right starting point. Once you know your numbers, free debt help is available from StepChange and National Debtline. You do not need to pay for debt help.

Can I get free budgeting help?

Yes. MoneyHelper, Citizens Advice and StepChange all offer free budgeting support. You do not need to use a paid service to get started.

This guide is for general information only. It is not financial advice. Free debt help is available from charities and public bodies. Always check fees, terms, and eligibility before using a paid service.