[quote=“spaint”][quote=“Lili”]
HAH. There is a thread where I think divea or Icon replied that excluding rent/utilities/insurance, one cannot live on $14,000NT a month. What? WHAT?! That’s almost $500USD! I can live on half of that at home if I’m very very careful. And I’m talking New York Fucking City.
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You CAN live on 14K a month, if you’re excluding all that other stuff. Christ, that’s 465NT a day. What the hell do you think you’re gonna be eating if you can’t make that go for three meals?
Breakfast: NT$50. Hell, let’s be extravagant and eat at McDonald’s for ~NT$80 with a coffee.
Lunch: Biandang (meat, veg, rice in a box): NT$70 (that’s not even a cheap one)
Dinner: Subway, NT$59 for the special
Buy a big bottle of water from 7-11: NT$35
Total: NT$244 => NT$7320 a month if you choose the expensive breakfast. Last I checked, that would get you breakfast for one if you chose the wrong greasy diner in NYC.
Like I said to you before, Taiwan can be very cheap if you’re not boozing it up. Of course, if you NEED alcohol and coffee you’re gonna be pissing all your money away. Bottle of Taiwan beer: NT$55. Latte at Starbucks: NT$140 (for a venti, the only size worth buying anyway). One each of those everyday and you’ll double your monthly expenses.
EDIT: add 30NT for bus fare each way to wherever it is you need to go everyday, unless you live within walking distance of your school. Also, above figures assume you have a washing machine at home… Also, I can’t be bothered calculating laundry detergent, soap, shampoo and toilet paper on a per diem basis.
And the other expenses, that you specifically excluded, are SIGNIFICANTLY lower than NYC. Rent, if you’re sharing or living in a studio, can be low. Utilities… I don’t really remember how they compare but I pay around NT$750 a month for gas and NT$500 to NT$700 a month for electricity. That’s the total for two people in the same apartment, with AC running quite a lot. Water (if you even have to pay it) is a trivial sum in the region of 100 to 200 NT every month or three.
[quote=“Lili”]
I have an apt lined up in Da’an
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How much rent are you paying and for what, if you don’t mind me asking? Last time I checked, Da’an isn’t exactly the cheapest district in Taipei.[/quote]
First I disagree with your assumption that anyone who can’t live on NT$14,000 a month must be ‘boozing it up.’
Let’s see, first lunchboxes are crap and very unhealthy with all the fried foods involved so I make my own lunches. Nobody but the idiot who advertised for Subway eats Subway every day for dinner. I don’t buy a big bottle of water from 7-11 to carry around with me all day while I am working, I end up buying quite a few smaller bottles. So all total on an average day I probably spend at least NT$200 at 7-11 not counting meals. A bowl of beef noodles, in Kaohsiung, cost me NT$70, but that’s not a ‘meal’ it’s a bowl of noodles. I rarely eat anywhere that cost under NT$100 per person and those are the ‘local’ places to eat, not the overpriced western style joints that my friends are always pushing me to go. So three ‘real’ meals cost at least NT$300 plus NT$200 at 7-11. That means I am spending NT$500 a day without a drop of booze in the equation. So we have established that I can not live comfortably (or realistically) on under NT$14,000 a month. Now let’s dig a little deeper into my living expenses.
The costs of a scooter, gas, oil, clothing, shoes, entertainment (go out to the movies, books (damn expensive to buy books written in English), DVDs, cable TV, ADSL, going out to eat with friends (the Lighthouse sets me back at least NT$2,000 every time I go, etc.), personal computer, software for the computer, upgrades for the computer hardware, cell phone, cell phone bill, pots/pans/dishes, cat food, cat litter, cleaning supplies, mops, pails, house plants, aquariums, fish, fish food, frames for pictures, and other such things – has not been figured in but all of these things I buy regularly so they are all a part of my living expenses. It’s also safe to say I spend at least NT$4,000 a month on groceries for those meals I decide to cook at home.
Now if you want to live like a bohemian then I am sure you can rent a room quite cheaply; however, for me, I pay NT$9,500 a month rent for a small three bedroom apartment (surrounded by locals not an expat enclave) because I am an adult who has worldly possessions, my electricity is at least NT$2,000 a month (I have a/c and I use it when I am home) because I like to be comfortable in my own home, water and gas also cost but I don’t recall how much. All total this cost more than the last place I was living in the US (Tennessee) and is a lot smaller.
Of course I agree, Taiwan is cheaper than the US, generally speaking; however, unless you are counting every NT$ you spend and stay away from everything imported, I wouldn’t call it a cheap place to live.
For me, my salary now in Taiwan is almost what I was making in 1993 in the US, almost, but not quite. I like Taiwan so I stay here. I am not getting rich here, but I am not suffering either.