£90,000 – the amount it costs to raise a child by the age of 11

THE cost of raising a pre-secondary school child has risen to more than £90,000, according to new figures.

THE cost of raising a pre-secondary school child has risen to more than £90,000, according to new figures.

The average annual cost of raising a child up to the age of 11 in Britain has increased by £1,085 in the last five years, up 15 per cent from £7,222 in 2007 to £8,307 in 2011, the study by Halifax suggests.

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Inflation, as measured by the Retail Price Index, rose by 18 per cent over the same period, with parents spending just under a fifth (18 per cent) of their income on bringing up their child.

Schooling made up the largest increase in spending, including money for uniforms, class materials, school trips and lunches, which are estimated to have increased by 24 per cent from £684 a year in 2007 to £849 in 2012, the building society said.

The costs of nursery and child-minding accounted for the second largest increase, which have grown by 22 per cent to £3,346 in 2011.

This typically accounted for 40 per cent of the total annual expenditure incurred by parents when raising their offspring, while the nursery and child-minding combined with schooling accounted for half of the total annual expenditure.

Spending on food and holidays fell in real terms with parents spending £889 feeding their children in 2011, an increase of 14 per cent from £780 in 2007, while spending on children’s holidays rose by 16 per cent to £740 during the same period.

Spending on children’s clothing fell from £602 in 2007 to £513 in 2011, or 15 per cent.

However, “heavy discounting” among retailers to cope with the economic downturn could have had an impact on the figures, the report said.