Steppenwolfe wrote: » Don't do it.
theemigrant wrote: » Ok guys, Looks like ill be coming home. Im just wondering if anyone on here has doen the same and how they got on. What problems have ye encountered? Apparently my old ncb for car insurance will no longer be valid.
Menas wrote: » If you are returning home from Kazakhstan you will find the cost of living here high. If returning from Switzerland you will find it cheap. Will you change your user name to 'The Returning exile'?
2smiggy wrote: » depends how long you have been away really. if more than 2 years your car insurance will probably be expensive. like mentioned already , depends where you are coming back from. then again wages in what ever country you are in sort of match the cost of living, so assuming you will be working i'm sure you will not go hungry. as for signing on the dole as soon as you come back, i have no idea what so ever
theemigrant wrote: » What problems have ye encountered?
csallmighty wrote: » A friend of mine got caught out with insurance too, 11 years no claims down the toilet. His new quote will cost roughly the same as his younger brother who is only starting to drive at 18.
theemigrant wrote: » just got a quote of 1900 on a passat
jimgoose wrote: » That pisses me off no end, people who've been driving for years and years being charged through the nose by insurance assholes with this completely arbitrary two-year thing. Bloody nonsense! :mad:
seamus wrote: » For example, a single person living inside Dublin city could easily live, after rent, on €400/month.
seamus wrote: » ...Not to mention the amount of time you'll spend travelling.
smash wrote: » Only presuming that your rent covers all your bills...
seamus wrote: » Not really. You'll get an all-in mobile phone package for €40. TV & Broadband for €70. Electricity shouldn't be more than €70. Water & Refuse, like €40. That's assuming you're not sharing the latter 3 with other housemates. Leaves you €180/month for groceries, which is perhaps leaving you on the edge a little bit, but well manageable if you know how to shop.
smash wrote: » Already your €400 has been reduced to €180. At €45 a week it would barely cover groceries for dinner let alone lunch at work or the odd cup of coffee. Pints even once a month is out of the question with that level of money to live on.
seamus wrote: » Cost of living really is what you make of it. Some people find themselves raiding the penny jar even month even though they earn €50k, others have €50k in savings built up on a salary of €30k. Accommodation is the killer, not just in overall price, but ancillary costs. You'll get cheap rent outside the cities, but you'll spend a fortune on travel costs. You can spend a fortune renting in a city, but live very frugally the rest of the month. For example, a single person living inside Dublin city could easily live, after rent, on €400/month. You might only get out for pints once a week and won't be going to many fancy restaurants, but you'll have a well-stocked fridge and all mod cons. Go out to somewhere in Kildare and you might save €1000 on rent, but you'll spend at least €100 a week on petrol and busses. Not to mention the amount of time you'll spend travelling.
csallmighty wrote: » That's horrible. I assume your quote would have been a fraction of that price. My friend got a quote of €2000 on a Golf, should have been only a few hundred.
biko wrote: » Are you moving back to the pale or some small rural town?
MathDebater wrote: » Where are you returning from? Compare the cost of living there to here using numbeo.http://www.numbeo.com/cost-of-living/