
'Dreading next winter's bills': Half of families in Barnardos survey cut back or go without essentials
Parents are borrowing money to buy food, cancelling medical insurance, and already 'dreading' next winter's heating bills, it said.
Only 27% of parents did not need to cut back or go without any items listed in the survey, compared to 37% in 2022.
Heating was cut back, or gone without, by one in five families, while low incomes forced almost one third of parents into arrears on energy bills, it said.
The pressures are such that 40% of parents borrowed money at least once in the last year to buy essentials.
Some 40% of parents skipped meals or reduced portion sizes so their children would have enough to eat.
Another 28% felt at some point they did not have enough food for their children, and 12% used a foodbank.
The data on rent shows that, in 2022, just 2% of parents faced serious problems paying the rent. This is now at 7%.
Barnardos CEO Suzanne Connolly called for targeted permanent supports instead of once-off cost-of-living measures. Picture: Patrick Bolger
One woman said: 'It has made me feel guilty and useless as a mother as I am struggling to give my children what they need… It's not enough. My children's mental health is also suffering.'
Another parent explained: 'My in-laws buy us fuel each week, we couldn't afford it otherwise. I never have money in my purse or account. We are worse off than before.'
Another said: 'There's not much left for any pleasures in life. It's grim and not getting any better.'
One parent said they are 'dreading next winter's bills'.
After-school activities were cut by other parents surveyed.
The survey of 1,000 parents or guardians was carried out in May by Amárach Research.
Some 52% of those surveyed cut back or went without social activities, while 51% cut back or went without clothing and medical appointments.
Some 78% of parents said these problems had a negative impact on their children, with 19% saying this is significant.
Providing children with daily essentials is sometimes or always a worry for 70%.
Barnardos CEO Suzanne Connolly said:
Parents on the lowest incomes are really struggling, as well as those just outside the threshold for welfare supports.
The organisation has been conducting this survey for four years.
Ms Connolly said that, in that period, 'things have remained static, despite repeated once-off government cost-of-living measures".
She called for targeted permanent supports instead. She added:
At an absolute minimum, every child in Ireland should live in homes with adequate heating and electricity, sufficient nutritious food and appropriate clothing, as well as the opportunity to engage in sporting and cultural activities.
Barnardos called for changes in the fuel allowance and for child support payments to increase in line with inflation. This would mean an increase for under-12s by €6 weekly and for over-12s by €15 weekly in Budget 2026.
It argued that income disregard — where some income types are not included in means-testing — for one-parent family payments should be increased.
All financially vulnerable families using prepaid meters should be placed on the lowest tariffs, it said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
23-07-2025
- Irish Examiner
Irish Examiner view: Food price cuts should be on the table in Budget 2026
Normally, a second-place finish is a cause for celebration, bringing with it a silver medal, perhaps. Ireland being the second-most-expensive country in Europe for food is no such situation. Citizens have long complained about prices here, usually with some justification. But having the black-and-white statistics to prove it is, strangely, validating and disheartening at the same time. Some 40% of parents in a recent Barnardos cost-of-living survey reported reducing or cutting their own meals so their children could eat, with slightly more than 40% of families cutting back on things like food, energy, and heating just to keep pace with bills. Food price increases have been double the rate of inflation, which itself is no small obstacle to families struggling to stay afloat. It's not as if the money is necessarily going to the producers, because Irish farmers are seeing, for instance, the lowest grain prices in 40 years. Either way, the sort of disparity found by Barnardos should not exist in a developed nation. And yet the Government has, to date, ruled out any one-off measures to address the cost of living, with the electricity rebate of the last few years (welcomed by many struggling families) not due to be repeated in this October's budget. Does this make the Government tone deaf, or does it have some other initiative up the Cabinet sleeves that will tackle the cost of living on a more durable basis? As things stand, there is a €1bn plan to reduce the cost of Vat for the hospitality sector, which, in turn, takes any real scope for tax adjustments elsewhere in the economy. The Irish Congress of Trade Unions has described it as economic vandalism, given that the sector is growing and not stagnating. This may or may not be hyperbole, because a great many businesses are under pressure due to soaring costs, but it does emphasise that the Government seems to have taken its eye off the ball when it comes to the most pressing issues affecting the electorate. With pre-budget submissions already being made and with more to come, it remains to be seen if the Government will change course to give the people not just what they want, but what they need. Nature reclaims land lost in war The destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam in Ukraine in 2023 not only obliterated a vast area of land but deprived 1m people of drinking water. Russia, as one might expect, denies being behind the explosion, which just happened to occur during its illegal invasion of the country. Russia still denies being behind the explosion at the Nova Kakhovka dam in Ukraine in 2023, obliterating a vast area of land and depriving 1m people of drinking water. File picture: AP/Maxar Technologies Yet from that ruin and weaponisation of natural resources, an unexpected ecological fairytale has emerged. As the report in today's edition notes: 'The drained reservoir is now home to dense growths of willow and poplar and enormous wetlands; endangered sturgeon have returned to waterways; wild boar and mammals to the forests; and there are signs of spontaneous regeneration across a huge stretch of floodplain.' To attempt to visualise it, imagine an area just a little bigger than Co Kilkenny was under water, then became forest and marsh within just a couple of years. No human effort has gone in to this — by all accounts it is a natural regeneration, even if the area is contaminated by heavy metals and other pollutants that could well leach into the soil. Ultimately, nature cares not whether humanity thrives or dies. What the reservoir shows is how quickly nature can reclaim what we relinquish, and how it will go on in some form. The difference to, say, how the jungle retook and buried Mayan cities is that this one has happened in our own lifetime. If more of our species could comprehend the scale, perhaps we might make it out of the climate disaster in better shape. What's your view on this issue? You can tell us here Ireland and the nuclear option One would not normally think of 'Michael O'Leary' and 'nuclear power' in the same mental breath, but his comments this week have brought them together. Commenting on the National Development Plan, in among his jabs at the Government's capabilities to spend the money wisely and his lack of faith that the Dublin Airport metro would be used, he suggested that some of the money should be used to build a nuclear power plant. Sound reasons have been advanced for not having nuclear power in Ireland but Michael O'Leary's comments are grounded in sensible notion of achieving energy independence. File picture: PA While O'Leary has form for eye-grabbing, pithy statements, sometimes seemingly said without forethought, in this case there was logic: Energy independence. Ireland imports electricity from the UK, which is building a series of nuclear plants, and will soon import power from France, which has several. Much of our development capacity depends on this imported power, and data centres already make up some 20% of the country's usage. Ireland stopped using coal for power just last month, and we no longer have any peat-fuelled plants, though gas and oil are widely used. Still, while renewables make an increasingly welcome proportion of energy generated here, we will always need contingencies. Mr O'Leary said: We are at the end of the line and will be the first to be switched off if there is a crisis. Many sound reasons have been advanced for not having nuclear power in this country, not least on the back of our relationship with the victims of the Chernobyl disaster. The price shock that came with Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the associated restrictions put on imports of Russian gas show that we can never take anything for granted. Has the time, then, come for a formal commission to consider a nuclear power plant in Ireland as part of a long-term overall energy strategy?


Irish Daily Mirror
08-07-2025
- Irish Daily Mirror
40% of parents borrowed money to provide essentials for their children
Four in 10 parents in Ireland borrowed money in the past year to provide essentials for their children. This is according to Barnardos' Cost of Living 2025 report which was published on Tuesday. It found that a significant number of parents are struggling. Of 1,000 parents across a nationally represented survey, 19% had to cut back or go without food over the past six months. Some 40% of parents said they skipped meals or reduced portion sizes so their children would have enough to eat, while 28% felt at some point they didn't have enough food to feed their children and 12% used a foodbank. Due to insufficient income, 18% of parents cut back on or went without heating and 17% on electricity in the past six months. One third of parents (32%) went into arrears on energy bills due to insufficient income. As the cost of living continues to rise, more than half (52%) cut back or went without social activities and 41% cut back on clothing. One in five parents said they went without or avoided medical appointments. The vast majority of parents (78%) said cost of living problems negatively affect their children, with 19% saying it significantly does. Only one in four parents said they did not need to cut back or go without essential items. Seven in ten parents said they sometimes or always worry about not being able to provide their children with daily essentials. One parent that took part in the survey said: 'I have turned the heating down in the house to reduce the bill, meaning the kids now sleep with extra blankets and wear jumpers or hoodies around the house. "I never want my children to go cold or hungry so I'll often try to sleep to stay warm and keep lights off to reduce bills also.' While another said: 'There's not much left for any pleasures in life. It's grim and not getting any better. It just keeps getting worse and worse. Dreading next winter's bills.' And a third commented: 'We are just barely getting by. My in-laws buy us fuel each week we couldn't afford it otherwise. I never have money in my purse or account. We are worse off than before.' Barnardos CEO Suzanne Connolly said the report shows that parents and children across the country 'are still going without or having to cut back on basic essentials'. She said: 'Parents on the lowest incomes are really struggling, as well as those just outside the threshold for welfare support. They are continuing to try everything to give their children the necessities for a decent quality childhood, but unfortunately at times failing.' Since this annual report began in 2021, Ms Connolly said things have 'remained static', despite repeated once-off Government cost of living measures. She added: 'There must be targeted permanent support introduced, otherwise more children will go without essentials next year. 'At an absolute minimum every child in Ireland should live in homes with adequate heating and electricity, sufficient nutritious food and appropriate clothing, as well as the opportunity to engage in sporting and cultural activities. Parents should not be at risk of constant financial distress in order to provide their children with these essentials.' The charity is recommending that the government increase the child support payment in line with inflation. This would require increasing the payment for children under 12 by €6 per week and for children aged 12 and over by €15 per week in Budget 2026. For the one-parent family payment in Ireland, there is an income disregard for the first €165 of gross weekly earnings. Barnardos recommends that this income disregard is increased, enabling single parents to retain more income. It says this would better protect children in these households who are at disproportionate risk of going without essentials. In Budget 2026 the charity is also asking for fuel allowance to be extended to those on this single parent payment, and that vulnerable families using prepaid metres should be placed on fuel allowance.


Irish Examiner
08-07-2025
- Irish Examiner
'Dreading next winter's bills': Half of families in Barnardos survey cut back or go without essentials
Almost half of families in Ireland go without or at least cut back on basic essentials including food and electricity, new figures in the Barnardos Cost of Living 2025 survey claim. Parents are borrowing money to buy food, cancelling medical insurance, and already 'dreading' next winter's heating bills, it said. Only 27% of parents did not need to cut back or go without any items listed in the survey, compared to 37% in 2022. Heating was cut back, or gone without, by one in five families, while low incomes forced almost one third of parents into arrears on energy bills, it said. The pressures are such that 40% of parents borrowed money at least once in the last year to buy essentials. Some 40% of parents skipped meals or reduced portion sizes so their children would have enough to eat. Another 28% felt at some point they did not have enough food for their children, and 12% used a foodbank. The data on rent shows that, in 2022, just 2% of parents faced serious problems paying the rent. This is now at 7%. Barnardos CEO Suzanne Connolly called for targeted permanent supports instead of once-off cost-of-living measures. Picture: Patrick Bolger One woman said: 'It has made me feel guilty and useless as a mother as I am struggling to give my children what they need… It's not enough. My children's mental health is also suffering.' Another parent explained: 'My in-laws buy us fuel each week, we couldn't afford it otherwise. I never have money in my purse or account. We are worse off than before.' Another said: 'There's not much left for any pleasures in life. It's grim and not getting any better.' One parent said they are 'dreading next winter's bills'. After-school activities were cut by other parents surveyed. The survey of 1,000 parents or guardians was carried out in May by Amárach Research. Some 52% of those surveyed cut back or went without social activities, while 51% cut back or went without clothing and medical appointments. Some 78% of parents said these problems had a negative impact on their children, with 19% saying this is significant. Providing children with daily essentials is sometimes or always a worry for 70%. Barnardos CEO Suzanne Connolly said: Parents on the lowest incomes are really struggling, as well as those just outside the threshold for welfare supports. The organisation has been conducting this survey for four years. Ms Connolly said that, in that period, 'things have remained static, despite repeated once-off government cost-of-living measures". She called for targeted permanent supports instead. She added: At an absolute minimum, every child in Ireland should live in homes with adequate heating and electricity, sufficient nutritious food and appropriate clothing, as well as the opportunity to engage in sporting and cultural activities. Barnardos called for changes in the fuel allowance and for child support payments to increase in line with inflation. This would mean an increase for under-12s by €6 weekly and for over-12s by €15 weekly in Budget 2026. It argued that income disregard — where some income types are not included in means-testing — for one-parent family payments should be increased. All financially vulnerable families using prepaid meters should be placed on the lowest tariffs, it said.