I'm afraid it's awful boring and no fun but spending has to be cut, definitely agree about classes for kids that age, don't need them, whatever about the 6 yr old but minimum.
Also spending diary, really start taking note and seeing exactly where the money is going, takeaway coffees while nice are a luxury when you are overspending on your budget. Bring a coffee/flask/whatever you need to do to cut that down, bring lunch too if that's another spend. You quite probably have enough clothes in your wardrobe too to see out the year, kids clothes are different obviously as they grow out of them, are you a Next or a Penneys shopper for them?
Are all your utilities with the cheapest provider, shop around I presume for insurance etc. I know it's time consuming when you are a single parent, I was one myself but at least with just one kid and childcare wasn't as expensive back then!
Again boring but spending diary, cannot emphasise enough how important it is to know where your funds are going, without that clarity you can't cut back properly.
A very young new work colleague of mine years ago confided that she could not keep on top of her credit union loan, it was only about 1k at the time, anyway advised her to do spending diary, turned out she was spending 30 quid a week on Lindt chocolate, now she loved it but loved clearing her loan better! It's not no coffees forever, it's just until you get a handle on the whole show.
Also spending diary, really start taking note and seeing exactly where the money is going, takeaway coffees while nice are a luxury when you are overspending on your budget. Bring a coffee/flask/whatever you need to do to cut that down, bring lunch too if that's another spend. You quite probably have enough clothes in your wardrobe too to see out the year, kids clothes are different obviously as they grow out of them, are you a Next or a Penneys shopper for them?
Are all your utilities with the cheapest provider, shop around I presume for insurance etc. I know it's time consuming when you are a single parent, I was one myself but at least with just one kid and childcare wasn't as expensive back then!
Again boring but spending diary, cannot emphasise enough how important it is to know where your funds are going, without that clarity you can't cut back properly.
A very young new work colleague of mine years ago confided that she could not keep on top of her credit union loan, it was only about 1k at the time, anyway advised her to do spending diary, turned out she was spending 30 quid a week on Lindt chocolate, now she loved it but loved clearing her loan better! It's not no coffees forever, it's just until you get a handle on the whole show.