Affordit guide
How much should I spend on childcare?
Important note
Affordit is designed to help you plan before you commit. It does not run a credit check, connect to your bank account, approve finance or provide regulated financial advice. Use it as general planning guidance to sense-check your numbers.
A useful starting point, not a hard rule
There is no single safe amount that works for everyone. A practical spending limit depends on income, regular costs, savings, timeline, location, existing commitments and how much pressure the decision creates.
Use rules of thumb carefully. They can be a starting point, but they should not replace checking your own monthly budget and emergency buffer.
Costs to include
- Nursery fees
- Childminder fees
- Wraparound care
- Holiday clubs
- Travel
- Food or supplies
- Backup care
- Income changes
Warning signs you may be spending too much
- Childcare leaves no room after bills
- Holiday care is missing
- Work travel increases
- Income changes are ignored
Example scenario
A £900/month nursery place can have a bigger household impact if commuting rises or working hours change.
How Affordit helps
Affordit helps you test a spending amount against your actual savings, monthly contribution, regular costs and timeline. It helps show whether a route feels sustainable, manageable, stretched or not realistic yet.
Common questions
How much should I spend?
A useful budget leaves room for essentials, bills, savings, normal spending and unexpected costs after the commitment is included.
Should I follow a fixed percentage rule?
Percentage rules can be useful starting points, but they do not know your rent, bills, debts, location, savings or hidden costs. Check your full budget before deciding.
What if I can afford the payment but not the extras?
Then the plan may be stretched. Include hidden and ongoing costs before committing to the headline payment.
Related guides
Last reviewed: June 2026