Mum who couldn't afford Christmas gifts for her kids wins £1million on a scratchcard

It's not a stupid comment. It depends on lifestyle and when people like that see 1 million pounds in their bank account their lifestyle adjusts accordingly and they all of a sudden believe they've got a never ending amount of money.

Now lets say your 25 and you live to 85. Given current interest rates you will need to live on 16,700 pounds per year until you die. Thats crap.

Thats not even taking into account any money needed to pay off a mortgage or buy a car/house etc.

but that's not including interest/dividends/investment returns at the moment you could probbably buy a lot of good stock very cheap which would rise later in your life.

If you didn;t want to live in a massive house etc. 1 million would mean you could live comfortably on that using part time work or something you enjoyed to supplement your income.
 
but that's not including interest/dividends/investment returns at the moment you could probbably buy a lot of good stock very cheap which would rise later in your life.

If you didn;t want to live in a massive house etc. 1 million would mean you could live comfortably on that using part time work or something you enjoyed to supplement your income.

Is this woman likely to buy stock? :p


And that's not retiring, that's working part time :p

Either way, like I said it all depends on lifestyle. Personally I would work until 35 then retire.
 
You could retire on 1million.

5% interest = £50k a year which i'm guessing is more then 90% of the people on this forum make a year.
 
Wow she probably couldn't buy gifts because she was busy buying scratchcards? :p

Still... pretty darn lucky! I think the most I've won from them is a quid... Which I suppose is completely useless :p
 
Earlier today I thought good luck on her but I now see where the OP is coming from.
What kind of mother is down to her last £5 and decides to spend it on scratch cards and not food for her kids?
 
Your all forgetting Gordon Brown. You'll be providing him with 20k of your hard earned money. oh wait wut lulz!

Don't know how you are getting £20k.

£50,000 minus personal allowance = £41,805.

10% tax and 11% NI on the first £2,440 = £512.40

20% tax and 11% NI on the next £37,400 = £11,594.

40% tax and 1% NI on the next £3,685 = £1510.85

£512.40 + £11,594 + £1,510.85 = £13,617.25

However ISA's and NSI savings/investments aren't taxed and you have £10k of capital gains allowance as well, which is only taxed at 18% anyway. Manage the money correctly and you would be paying very little tax.
 
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They've just updated the article with pictures... lol. I rest my case. (Yes I'm an assuming b******, sue me).
 
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