Frugal saver gave up new clothes, gym membership and takeaway coffee to bank £30,000 for London flat

A frugal saver in her 20s has revealed how she managed to save thousands of pounds for a deposit for a home in north London.

Maria Bagalexis scrimped and saved £30,000 over five years to be able to afford the keys to her one-bedroom flat.

The 29-year-old didn’t spend a penny more than she needed to by giving up takeaway coffees, walking to work, exchanging her car and making packed lunches.

Maria Bagalexis scrimped and saved £30,000 over five years to be able to afford the keys to her one-bedroom flat in north London

She used extreme money-pinching tactics to cut back on every expense and lived on only the basic essentials for 12 months –  but says it was worth saving every penny to gain her own independence.

The keen saver was able to stop spending money on going out with friends at the weekend by working extra hours. 

She told The Mirror: ‘I kick-started my savings five years ago. I worked overtime every weekend for years so I could knuckle down to some serious saving.’  

Miss Bagalexis completely changed her lifestyle and was frugal with every outgoing she made.

The 29-year-old (pictured centre) gave up takeaway coffees, walking to work, exchanging her car and making packed lunches

The 29-year-old (pictured centre) gave up takeaway coffees, walking to work, exchanging her car and making packed lunches

She changed her job to one that was closer to home, ditched her gym membership and also managed to save £25 a month on her phone bill by keeping her old mobile

She changed her job to one that was closer to home, ditched her gym membership and also managed to save £25 a month on her phone bill by keeping her old mobile

She said: ‘I sold my nice BMW car for a cheaper, older Toyota Auris model, saved on road tax and fuel and chopped £600 off my insurance bill.’ 

How to save money to buy a house

Miss Bagalexis scrimped and saved for for five years to afford a deposit on her flat. But how did she do it?

  • Sold her car for a cheaper model and saved on road tax, fuel and insurance
  • Changed her job so she could walk to work
  • Saved money on her phone bill by keeping her old mobile 
  • Ditched her expensive gym membership
  • Gave up takeaway coffees 
  • Took up walking as exercise
  • Working overtime on the weekends and stopped going out
  • Moved in with her mum to save cash on rent
  • Took packed lunches to work 
  • Borrowed clothes from friends and family
  • Met her friends in the park to exercise

She changed her job to one that was closer to home, ditched her gym membership and also managed to save £25 a month on her phone bill by keeping her old mobile.  

She said: ‘I did smaller things like making packed lunches for work and giving up takeaway coffees, and it added up to savings of around £25 a week.’  

‘At weekends I would meet my friends in a local park and we did our own bootcamp.

‘It was great fun being outdoors and social without having to spend anything.’

Miss Bagalexis decided she needed drastic measures to be able to reach £30,000 in savings needed for a deposit.  

She said: ‘So, I moved in with my mum to enable me to do some intense saving – I had an agreement with her that I paid just a nominal amount towards my keep and I put the rest away towards my deposit.’ 

The hardest part of being canny with her money was not being able to buy any new clothes.  

But Miss Bagalexis learned to be thrifty with her wardrobe and borrowed from friends and family when she had a special occasion such as a wedding.

She said: ‘I didn’t buy any clothes, unless it was something necessary, like a basic pair of jeans.’ 

The efficient penny-pinching was not easy and house prices would often rise every time Miss Bagalexis had saved up enough for a deposit.

She said: ‘But eventually it all paid off and I now have a place.

‘I love it. I have friends who rent and don’t see a way out of that.’    

The efficient penny-pinching was not easy - but Miss Bagalexis says it was worth every penny to have her own independence 

The efficient penny-pinching was not easy – but Miss Bagalexis says it was worth every penny to have her own independence 

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