Your salary lands in your bank, then somehow vanishes by the 25th. Enter every category honestly. We'll show you exactly which one is the biggest leak, how it compares to UK averages, and what to cut first.
Ask any UK adult what they spend per month and most will give you an answer that is 15 to 30 percent below reality. This is not because people are dishonest, it is because spending is invisible by design. Direct debits leave automatically. Card payments do not feel like spending money the way handing over cash does. Subscription auto renewals process silently. Small £3 to £8 transactions slip past notice individually but compound into hundreds per month.
The classic example is the £4 coffee. One a day Monday to Friday is £80 per month or £960 per year. A £15 weekly takeaway is £780 per year. A £55 monthly phone contract is £660 per year. None of these feel like meaningful spending in the moment. Together they often consume 15 to 25 percent of someone's entire take home pay. This is why putting every category into a calculator changes minds. You cannot manage what you cannot see.
The 50/30/20 framework is the most useful single budgeting tool in UK personal finance. It splits your monthly take home pay into three buckets. 50 percent for needs: rent or mortgage, council tax, energy, water, food (basic groceries, not eating out), transport to work, basic insurance. 30 percent for wants: eating out, takeaways, social life, hobbies, gym, subscriptions, clothes, holidays, anything optional. 20 percent for savings and debt: emergency fund, ISAs, pension top ups, paying off credit cards or loans above the minimum.
The genius of the rule is its simplicity. If your needs exceed 50 percent of take home, the underlying issue is structural and almost always housing. No amount of cancelling subscriptions will fix rent that consumes 45 percent of your salary. If your wants exceed 30 percent, the problem is usually eating out, subscriptions, or shopping. Both fix differently. Diagnosing which bucket is overflowing tells you what to do next.
For UK households earning average wages, hitting 50/30/20 perfectly is genuinely difficult, especially in expensive cities. A more realistic target for most people is 60/25/15 as a stepping stone, working toward the cleaner 50/30/20 over time as income grows or housing changes.
If you are wondering where your money goes, the answer is almost always one of three categories.
The first is subscriptions and memberships. The average UK adult holds £40 to £70 per month of subscriptions they do not actively use. Streaming services that overlap (Netflix, Disney+, Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video). Multiple music services. Cloud storage you forgot about. App subscriptions auto renewed at full price after the trial. Gym memberships used twice a year. The fix is mechanical: pull the last 90 days of bank statements, list every recurring charge, and cancel anything used less than weekly.
The second is food spending. The combined cost of groceries, eating out, takeaways, food delivery apps, and lunchtime meal deals typically eats £300 to £600 per month for a single adult, often more than rent in cheaper cities. The fix here is also mechanical: switch one weekly shop to Aldi or Lidl (saves £30 to £80), batch cook two or three meals per week instead of buying lunch (saves £60 to £150), cap takeaways at four per month (saves £80 to £200).
The third is small daily transactions. Coffees, snacks, parking, occasional Ubers, mid week drinks, impulse Amazon orders, in app purchases. These never feel like overspending in the moment, but compound silently. A 30 day spending audit using your bank app's category feature usually reveals £100 to £300 of these per month that the user did not consciously decide on.
The instinct when budgets feel tight is to cut everything a little. This rarely works because tiny cuts produce tiny results, and the effort feels constant. The better approach is to identify your single biggest waste category and cut it dramatically.
Run the calculator above and look for the category flagged in red, or any single discretionary category exceeding 10 percent of take home pay. For most people it is one of: eating out (often 8 to 15 percent of take home), social life (6 to 12 percent), shopping (4 to 10 percent), or subscriptions (3 to 6 percent). Pick the largest and halve it for one month. The result is usually three or four times the impact of cutting many things slightly.
Halving one category is psychologically easier than slightly reducing five. You make one set of decisions (no takeaways for a month, no shopping for a month, no nights out for a month), then the rest of the budget runs as before. After 30 days, most people find the cut category was less essential than they thought, and they keep the new habit going.
One useful exercise when reviewing spending is asking yourself, for each category: "would I still pay this if I lost my job tomorrow?" Things you would pay regardless are needs. Things you would cut immediately are wants. The exercise reveals how much of your "needs" are actually wants in disguise.
The premium phone contract you would replace with a SIM only deal? That extra £25 per month is a want. The branded supermarket shop you would swap for own brand? That £40 per month is a want. The premium gym you would cancel for a council leisure centre? That £30 per month is a want. Most UK adults find around £150 to £300 per month of "needs" are actually wants in their fixed expenses. Recognising this does not mean cutting them, but knowing the truth changes how you respond when budgets get tight.
Three concrete steps. One: complete a 90 day spending audit today. Open your bank app, scroll back three months, and write down every recurring charge in a single list. This takes 20 minutes. Most people identify £40 to £100 per month of waste before they finish.
Two: cancel one big thing rather than five small things. If your subscriptions are out of control, cancel the most expensive one immediately. If eating out is the leak, commit to no takeaways for one month. The momentum of one big cut beats the friction of many small ones.
Three: try a budgeting app for one month. Apps like Snoop, Plum, Emma, and Money Dashboard auto categorise spending from connected bank accounts, often revealing patterns you miss manually. They are free and require no commitment beyond setup. After 30 days you will have an honest picture of where money goes, which usually shifts behaviour permanently.
If you cannot account for your spending, you are not alone, most UK adults underestimate monthly spending by 15 to 30 percent. This tool shows exactly where your money goes by category, calculates the percentage of income each category eats, and flags the single biggest waste category. The result is usually surprising. The most commonly underestimated areas are subscriptions, takeaways and food delivery, and small daily transactions like coffees and convenience purchases.
The 50/30/20 rule is the most widely used UK budgeting framework. It suggests 50 percent of take home pay goes to needs (rent, bills, food, transport), 30 percent to wants (eating out, social, shopping, subscriptions), and 20 percent to savings or debt repayment. If your needs exceed 50 percent, your housing costs are usually the issue. If your wants exceed 30 percent, it is typically eating out, subscriptions, and impulse shopping. The rule is a quick diagnostic for whether spending is structurally balanced.
The clearest signs of overspending are nothing left at the end of the month despite a decent salary, regular use of overdraft or credit card balance carrying over, and any single discretionary category (eating out, subscriptions, shopping) exceeding 10 percent of take home pay. This calculator highlights all three automatically. Other warning signs include relying on credit for unexpected expenses, paying minimum payments on cards, and feeling stressed about money even when nothing has gone wrong.
For a typical UK adult earning around £2,200 take home, rent or mortgage averages 30 to 38 percent of income, food (groceries plus eating out) averages 15 to 20 percent, transport 8 to 12 percent, utilities 7 to 10 percent, and discretionary spending 15 to 25 percent. Anything significantly above these averages is worth investigating. The biggest variations come from housing costs by region and whether you eat out frequently or cook at home.
UK budgeting apps connect to your bank account via Open Banking and auto categorise transactions in real time. The most popular options are Snoop, Plum, Emma, and Money Dashboard. All four are free for basic features and FCA regulated. They show you spending by category, flag duplicate subscriptions, and identify recurring waste. Most users find £40 to £100 per month of unnoticed waste within the first month of use, often more than enough to justify upgrading to a paid tier if you want extra features.
For a single adult in the UK, monthly food spending typically ranges from £200 (cooking everything at home with budget supermarket shopping) to £600 (significant eating out and takeaways). The 50/30/20 framework suggests groceries should fit within the needs bucket (50 percent of take home), while eating out and takeaways count as wants (30 percent of take home). A reasonable target is keeping all food costs combined under 15 to 20 percent of take home. Above that, food is usually one of the biggest opportunities to free up cash.