Donegal Daily
  • News
  • Sport
  • Courts
  • Jobs
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Politics
  • Features
  • Donegal County Council News
Tuesday 18°CWednesday 13°C

Donegal Daily Donegal Daily

sponsor banner
sponsor banner
  • News
  • Sport
  • Courts
  • Jobs
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Politics
  • Features
  • Donegal County Council News
LifestyleNews

Revealed: What do Irish households spend their money on?

written by Elaine McCallig June 21, 2017
FacebookTweetLinkedInPrint

The Central Statistics Office have just revealed what Irish householders spend their money on.

The survey was taken between February 2015 and February 2016, covering 6,839 households.

The CSO reveal that the average gross weekly income for Irish households was €1,097.04 during the study, which was 6.8% higher than the €1,026.77 figure recorded five years earlier.

The average weekly expenditure for all households was €845.12, which is 4.3% higher than the €810.61 figure recorded in 2010.

 

So what are we spending our money on?

There has been a 30% decrease in the expenditure on alcohol and tobacco, with the average household going from spending €39.48 per week to €28. More people are consuming alcohol at home with the proportion of total alcohol expenditure on alcohol consumed at home increasing from over 41% in 2009-2010 to over 51% in 2015-2016.

14.6% of the expenditure goes on food, a drop from 16.2% five years before.

In 1980, medical related expenditure (such as expenditure on doctors, dentists, medicines and health insurance) accounted for 1.8% of total household expenditure in contrast to 5.9% thirty five years later.

Source: CSO

Expenditure on Transport increased by nearly 7% from €116.31 per week in 2009-2010 to €124.39 in 2015-2016. This was due to an increase in expenditure on car purchases; however there was a 7.1% percent decrease in expenditure on Transport when expenditure on car purchases was excluded.

However we spend most of our money on miscellaneous goods and services such as health, childcare, education, pensions, and telephones, which has increased from 20.5% in 1980 to 34.2% to 2015-2016.

 

Gadgets

Claire Burke, Statistician says that in 2015-2016, 81% of households said that they had at least one home computer, compared with 77.3% and 56.2% five and ten years previously. In 2015-2016, just over half (50.9%) reported having two or more home computers.

Wifi is more popular too, with almost 73% of households indicated they had internet access in 2015-2016, compared with just under 66% five years earlier.

In 2015-2016, less than 66% of households had a fixed telephone. This is a drop of twenty percentage points from ten years earlier when just under 86% of households had a fixed landline.

Revealed: What do Irish households spend their money on? was last modified: June 21st, 2017 by Elaine McCallig
FacebookTweetLinkedInPrint

Tags:
CSOexpenditureincome
Elaine McCallig

LEAVE A COMMENT

You may also like

Beautiful Buncrana crowned Ireland’s best kept large...

53 minutes ago

Woman in Buncrana collision still in hospital...

1 hour ago

Gardai investigate attempted break-in to Carndonagh building...

2 hours ago

Cathaoirleach’s concert raises €7,525 and vital awareness...

3 hours ago

Update: Pedigree lambs flock home after theft...

3 hours ago

Huge crowd turns out for Luke McGuinness...

3 hours ago

Gardai seek witnesses after car crash in...

3 hours ago

Watch: Lucky Donegal man banks €104,000 from...

4 hours ago

Dance Corner waltzing into three Donegal towns...

4 hours ago

Donegal man deported from the US for...

6 hours ago
Advertisement
Advertisement

Donegal County Council

Facebook
Donegal County Council
Advertisement
Advertisement
Donegal Daily Jobs

Read More

  • News
  • Sport
  • Courts
  • Jobs
  • Sales & Services
  • Obituaries
  • Features
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Council News

Information

  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise WIth Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms & Conditions

Our Sites

Donegal Woman
Donegal Woman
Donegal Daily

© 2025 Donegal Daily. All rights reserved.
Website by owenod


Back To Top.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkPrivacy policy