logo
Five people break down their wellness budgets: ‘incredibly expensive and time-consuming'

Five people break down their wellness budgets: ‘incredibly expensive and time-consuming'

The Guardian07-05-2025

W hat does it take to be well? The answer varies from person to person. For some, it may require prescription medication and yoga classes; for others, it could be a vegetarian diet and regular doctor visits. One thing is certain: it costs money.
Americans spend more than $6,000 (£4,500) per person a year on wellness, according to the Global Wellness Institute. This makes the US 'the largest wellness economy by far'. In the UK, per capita average wellness spending is $3,342 (£2,505).
Where is all that money going? We asked five readers to break down what they spend on health and wellness per month. Julia (pseudonym), 26, Pennsylvania
Occupation: environmental consultant
Income: $80,000 (£60,000)
I feel a little embarrassed because sometimes it seems 'wellness' is something we should be able to achieve without a lot of spending. But what I'm doing now is working for me mentally and physically.
Food: about $300-$350 (£225-£260) on groceries, generally produce and dry/canned staples but some prepared foods when I'm in a pinch. Although I try to cook vegan, I consider myself vegetarian because I'm not 100% there.
Medical/healthcare: $370 (£277) $280 for employer-sponsored healthcare
$80 on psychotherapy
$10 on a prescription medication
Fitness: about $500 (£375) total $360 on personal training
$20 on my gym membership (discounted with the personal training), and $45 on a protein-powder subscription
I'm also part of a run club and rec sports league, which have an upfront cost for multiple months, but combined are about $75 per month. It's funny, I don't consider myself very athletic, but it sure doesn't look that way from my spending.
Cosmetic care: about $55 total (£40) $35 on a prescription skincare subscription for a two-month supply (but I'm planning to cancel)
$15 average on moisturizer/cleanser that will last multiple months
Miscellaneous: If I had to put a number, I'd say $90 (£120) per month. I've had some sporadic wellness-related purchases, like equipment for biking and kayaking. I'd also consider art/crafting classes part of this.
Monthly total: about $1,340 (£1,000) Ellen (pseudonym), 33, London
Occupation: office worker
Annual income: £80,000 ($107,000)
It is incredibly expensive and time-consuming to maintain good health and wellbeing if you have chronic health conditions.
I have high blood pressure and a couple of autoimmune conditions, and while medical care is provided on the NHS and covered by employer private insurance, I have some health needs that must be paid out of pocket. The conditions I have are not covered by private insurance, and NHS waiting lists for some tests or appointments can be long, so occasionally I pay for them privately.
My health issues aren't disabling, but they do require me to keep a healthy lifestyle, watch my weight and cholesterol, and stay active. Stress makes my symptoms worse, so I try to keep my stress levels low, too.
Having chronic conditions young means you really need to take care of yourself if you want to live a long life.
Food: £940 ($1,250) £500 for groceries
£400 for a ready-meal delivery subscription
£40 for protein shakes
My partner and I are trying to eat healthy and optimize our protein and fibre intake. The meal-delivery subscription sends ready-made meals with balanced macros, but I love to cook homemade meals when I can.
Medical/healthcare: usually about £390 ($520), but this varies a lot from one month to another. Regular expenses include: £60 for dental care
£100 for psychotherapy, which is only partially covered by insurance
£100-£200 for occasional physio or massages for any flare-ups
£80 for prescriptions
£20 for contact lenses
£30 for supplements
Fitness: about £382 ($510) £320 per month for my gym and to train with a personal trainer once a week.
Occasionally I'll join a yoga or pilates class, which averages out to about £50 per month.
I also subscribe to a couple health-tracking apps that make managing my conditions and activity easier, at £12.
Cosmetic care: about £225 ($300) Roughly £100 on toiletries, including skincare and makeup for very dry and sensitive skin
£50 for a haircut
£75 for a manicure/pedicure
Miscellaneous: We love sauna, steam and cold-plunge sessions in a local Russian bathhouse, and try to go once a month, for about £90.
Monthly total: about £2,027 ($2,704) skip past newsletter promotion
Sign up to Well Actually
Practical advice, expert insights and answers to your questions about how to live a good life Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
after newsletter promotion For some, wellness may require prescription medication and yoga classes; for others, it could be a vegetarian diet and regular doctor visits. Photograph: AleksandarGeorgiev/Getty Images Joshua, 35, and Nicolle, 35, Nevada
Occupation: healthcare data analyst and nurse
Combined income: $175,000 (£131,000)
We spend quite a bit on health and wellness every month, but the peace of mind and inner calm is worth every cent. We both work very stress-filled jobs and have found ways to decompress via health and fitness.
We enjoy cooking. It has become a bonding experience throughout the years, and we like following it up with a movie or TV show at the end of the day to relax. Both of these, like the gym, take a certain level of investment.
Insurance is one of the only things we pay for that we hope we never need to use. We pay for the best health and dental insurance we can afford because we both see the worst of the US healthcare system every day. The speed at which a single accident or diagnosis can wreck a marriage, create generational financial strain or push someone to despair is astounding.
Food: $1,526 (£1,144) $1,439 for groceries
$87 for fast food
Medical/healthcare: $1,670 (£1,250) $1,250 per month for medical insurance
$120 for dental insurance
$230 for an FSA
$65 per month for a specialty compounded medication
We probably spend $5 a month replacing expired health supplies (Band-Aids, Neosporin, etc).
Fitness: about $378 (£283) $278 for two Hiit gym memberships
$100 per month for occasional health-related supplies like shoes, vitamins and supplements
Cosmetic care: We save for haircuts and cosmetics throughout the year by setting aside $150 (£112) per month.
Monthly total: about $3,802 (£2,850) Cooking can be a bonding experience for your family as well as a way to eat healthy food. Photograph: LeoPatrizi/Getty Images Anna, 48, New York
Occupation: food stylist
Annual household income: freelance, but usually more than $100,000 (£75,000).
I'm Swedish, so I grew up with free healthcare. When I first moved to the States about 10 years ago, it was difficult to get my head around paying money out of my own pocket for healthcare. I'm still very confused about the system here (who isn't?) and it can be scary to not know how much it would actually cost me and/or if I could afford it should I need urgent and complicated care. I believe we are particularly exposed as freelancers. It's a lot harder to find an affordable plan. Graphic with three lines of text that say, in bold, 'Well Actually', then 'Read more on living a good life in a complex world,' then a pinkish-lavender pill-shaped button with white letters that say 'More from this section'
Investing in wellness feels different. I'm interested in health and wellness and I enjoy my workouts – plus, it's part of my social life. I also see it as an investment for the future. I'm also lucky to live in an area where I can easily walk and run for free.
Food: $800-$1,000 (£600-£750). We are quite obsessed with food and quality, and try to shop organic when we can. We buy most groceries from our local WholeFoods. We don't follow any diet as such, but almost everything we eat at home is cooked from scratch and mostly seasonal. We avoid processed foods and rarely eat out or buy takeaways.
Medical/healthcare: $2,134 (£1,600) $2,067 for health insurance. We have a high deductible so any doctor's appointment outside of the standard annual exams needs to be paid for.
$37 for dental insurance and cleanings
$30 for medicines
Fitness: $219 (£163). I have a gym in my house that, apart from the initial cost – about $4,000 including a Peloton Bike+ – saves me money and time. $44 for Peloton membership. I use the subscription for cycling classes, strength training and barre, plus stretching.
$175 for Bikram yoga studio membership
Cosmetic care: I get Botox three to four times a year, and each visit is $1,200-$1,400. That averages out to about $379 (£284) per month.
Miscellaneous: $198.75 (£149) About $6.50 a month for my Welltory app, which measures my heart rate variability.
$29.99 a year, or $2.50, a month for the SleepWatch app
$76 for metabolism powder
$75 for other supplements – it depends on the season but usually vitamin D, B12, omega 3's, berberine and magnesium
$38.75 for protein powder
Monthly total: about $3,830 (£2,871)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Women's data from period tracking apps ‘being sold at scale'
Women's data from period tracking apps ‘being sold at scale'

Telegraph

time43 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Women's data from period tracking apps ‘being sold at scale'

Period tracking apps are a 'privacy risk' to women, University of Cambridge researchers have warned in a new report. The technology experts said private data from the apps, which track menstrual cycles and are often used by women who want to conceive, were being collected and 'sold at scale'. The researchers from the university's Minderoo Centre for Technology and Democracy said that this 'poses risks and harms for users'. Menstrual data can provide insights into women's health and their reproductive choices. The apps contain data on exercise, diet, medication, sexual preferences, hormone levels and contraception use. This information was a 'gold mine' for consumer profiling and was often being sold on to third-parties, the report said. Fertility data 'most sought-after' Many women who download the apps do so when they are trying to get pregnant, which the authors said leads to a dramatic shift in shopping behaviour. They said: 'Data on who is pregnant, and who wants to be, has therefore emerged as some of the most sought-after information in digital advertising.' The team said the period tracking apps have rapidly risen in popularity, with global downloads of the three most popular apps surpassing 250 million. The experts said: 'Cycle tracking apps (CTA) are a lucrative business because they provide the companies behind the apps with access to extremely valuable and fine-grained user data. 'CTA data is not only commercially valuable and shared with an inextricable net of third parties (thereby making intimate user information exploitable for targeted advertising), but it also poses severe security risks for users.' Need for 'consent options' They pointed out that in the wrong hands, the data collected by the apps regarding pregnancy status could result in health insurance 'discrimination', risks to job prospects or even domestic abuse. The research team called for better governance of the 'femtech' industry, including improved data security of these apps, which should have 'meaningful consent options'. They also called for public health bodies such as the NHS to launch alternatives to commercial tracking apps that would give women more assurance about how their data is collected and used. 'Real and frightening' safety risks Stefanie Felsberger, lead author of the report, said: 'Menstrual cycle tracking apps are presented as empowering women and addressing the gender health gap. 'Yet the business model behind their services rests on commercial use, selling user data and insights to third parties for profit. 'There are real and frightening privacy and safety risks to women as a result of the commodification of the data collected by cycle tracking app companies.' Prof Gina Neff, executive director of Cambridge's Minderoo Centre, added: 'The use of cycle tracking apps is at an all-time high. 'Women deserve better than to have their menstrual tracking data treated as consumer data, but there is a different possible future.'

The cheap fat jabs sending big pharma into a frenzy
The cheap fat jabs sending big pharma into a frenzy

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

The cheap fat jabs sending big pharma into a frenzy

For many Americans who tuned in to watch the Super Bowl earlier this year, it was a surprise to find themselves fat-shamed during the ad break. 'Obesity is America's deadliest epidemic,' a voiceover said, as images of wobbling bellies, greasy burgers and giant apple pies flashed across TV screens. The Super Bowl's 127m-strong audience, who were tucking into an estimated 1.5bn chicken wings during the event, were warned that 'obesity leads to half a million deaths each year'. But Hims and Hers, the US online medicines company behind the ad, said people should not blame themselves. Instead, its advert claimed that 'the system' was keeping them 'sick and stuck', adding that 'there are medications that work, but they're priced for profits, not patients'. To the relief of viewers, Hims and Hers offered a 'life-changing' solution. Rather than paying hundreds of dollars each month for well-known, branded weight-loss jabs such as Wegovy, households could instead try Hims and Hers' cheaper, replica versions. 'This is the future of healthcare,' it argued. 'Join us in the fight for a healthier America.' However, for the likes of Danish obesity drug maker Novo Nordisk and US pharma rival Eli Lilly, which have claimed the rise of copycat jabs poses potential health risks, such claims have become a serious headache. Copycat boom Over the past few decades, both businesses have poured billions of dollars into obesity drug research – recently yielding blockbuster drugs Wegovy and Mounjaro. The rapid uptake of such drugs has prompted a surge in revenues for big pharma. But bosses are now increasingly worried that demand among American patients has been dented by a cluster of smaller, copycat companies.

Meera Syal: When Dad mistook me for Mum, I played along not to upset him
Meera Syal: When Dad mistook me for Mum, I played along not to upset him

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Meera Syal: When Dad mistook me for Mum, I played along not to upset him

Dad would often think I was my mother when she was younger, instead of his daughter. So I'd go along with that as it calmed and reassured him. That has to be the aim. Sometimes, five minutes later after he'd stopped being distressed, he'd find his own way back and know who I was. I came to believe that actually, there are many different kinds of reality in life. I mean, how do we know who's in the right one? Him or me? It becomes quite a Matrix kind of question! I had to open my mind a little bit to try and find the understanding and compassion – and go with whatever he was giving me. When a loved one has dementia it's a long, slow goodbye. You're losing them bit by bit. It's like a little light going off gradually, or a mechanism winding down. You become the parent, not the daughter. While that is certainly awful, there can be many moments of joy along the way, when the light is still on. For Dad, the thing that never left him until the very end, was his passion for music. He loved ghazals, Indian poetry and ballads, which we played and he would sing along. We also put old films from the 1950s and 60s from his youth on the iPad, essentially making our own memory pack for him. Photographs and anything that keeps the memories and the connections going is useful. Dad always had a great sense of humour, so we tried to make him laugh, and be upbeat. Mum visited my dad in the care home every single day and they had a routine, where they'd practise throwing and catching a ball (to keep up his motor skills) and then look at old photos together. You find your own ways of connecting, but the Alzheimer's Society is an amazing resource of information and advice, and through the Dementia Friends network, we found incredible volunteers who would even offer to give relatives a break by sitting and talking to your loved one. Dad was in the care home for six years, so it became the new normal in some ways. You learn to live with the upset, but I hated that in their golden years, when they should have been growing old together, they were separated, with Dad remaining in the home until he died in 2018. When I remember my Papa, I don't try to forget his illness; you can't, it's part of the journey we all had together. I just hope we did everything we could to make his quality of life as good as we could in those last years. You reach a stage where it's actually worse for the family than it is for the person with the disease, because they're in their own world. I took advice about genetic testing, but looking at the rest of my family history, it's highly unlikely to be genetic. There's no history of dementia on my father's side, his older brother is still alive and well, his own father died in his mid-nineties unaffected by dementia. My mother's own mum died at the grand age of 103 (in India!) and she has sisters who are still alive with all their faculties. Losing my parents has made me more health conscious. I'm alert to the increased risks in South Asians of hypertension, obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular health. And actually there's now more awareness of the massive link between gum disease and Alzheimer's. My father suffered with terrible gums for many, many years. The older I get I take better care of myself, watching my cholesterol levels and cardiovascular health and I regularly exercise and look after my gums with hygienist appointments three times a year. I can't change my genetic hand down, but I can try my best with my lifestyle to try and prevent my kids going through this with me one day.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store