Aussie mum's $1,000 savings confession exposes cost-of-living crisis facing millions

Leah Selfe
Leah Selfe shared she hasn't had a savings account in 10 years, while she hasn't paid herself superannuation in two. · Source: Supplied

An Aussie mum has shared she only has $1,000 in emergency savings to fall back on as the rising cost of living puts pressure on her household budget. Skyrocketing costs mean the ability to save for a rainy day, let alone retirement, is becoming harder and harder for many Aussies.

Single mum and business owner Leah Selfe told Yahoo Finance she hasn’t had a savings account in 10 years. The Gold Coast mum said rent, groceries and school costs for her 15-year-old son, Charlie, were the biggest pressures on her budget right now and left her with little wriggle room to stash cash for later down the track.

“Those are the biggest ones that I would say I have noticed have been the most stressful,” Selfe said.

“We’ve been living on the Gold Coast for close to nine years this year. In that nine years, what I paid in rent back then to what I pay now has doubled easily.

“With groceries, I find that I go to the shops and I come home with fewer and fewer bags and fewer and fewer items, which can sometimes be extremely depressing.”

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Selfe, an online business manager, said the reality was her family needed money at hand to pay for things now.

“That money is currently being used to pay for things [such as] when my son needs new clothes or school clothes … or even just to get household items when things break around the house, I need to know that I can pull that money and use it,” the 36-year-old said.

“So I haven’t had a savings account in a very long time … [My emergency savings] sit in a business account so if I ever need to it's there.

“At any given time, I wouldn't say there would be more than $1,000 in there so it has to be a small emergency, a big emergency would not be able to be covered.”

While Selfe said she wasn’t struggling to keep on top of her current costs, she said she was “acutely aware” of how much money was coming in and out.

“It definitely plays on my mind more than I would like it to. I’m checking my bank account because I’m just praying that a random bill hasn’t decided to come out, or if I need to get something fixed or replaced, I can potentially have the money sitting there,” she said.

Do you have a cost of living story to share? Contact tamika.seeto@yahooinc.com

Cost of living making it harder to save

New research from Real Insurance found a third of Aussies (31 per cent) were unable to save any money on a monthly basis.