A major new study from the Centre for Population Change has laid bare a seismic shift in British family life. Thousands of women of childbearing age are choosing not to have children, and the driving force is not a lack of maternal instinct or a surge in selfishness. It is, quite simply, money.
The research, which tracked the reproductive decisions of 5,000 women between 2018 and 2023, found that 47% of those currently childless and aged 25-40 say they are unlikely to ever have a child. The primary reason? The crippling cost of living and the fear of being unable to provide a secure future.
For years, we have talked about the 'motherhood penalty' – the hit to earnings and career progression that women take when they have a baby. This study shows that penalty is now so steep, so real, that it is shaping the most intimate life choices of a generation. 'It is a rational economic decision,' said Dr.
Anya Patel, the study's lead author. 'These women are looking at the price of childcare, the cost of housing in any area with decent schools, the stagnation of wages relative to inflation. They are deciding that the numbers simply do not add up.
It is not a rejection of family. It is a rejection of the financial trap that motherhood has become.' The data from the Office for National Statistics already shows a long-term trend: the average age of first-time mothers has risen to 30.
9, and fertility rates are at a record low. But this study gets to the 'why' in brutal detail. Among those who said they would not have children, 72% cited financial insecurity as a 'major factor'.
The house price to earnings ratio has tripled since the 1980s. Childcare costs in the UK are among the highest in the OECD. Rents eat up more than a third of take-home pay for most private tenants.
This is not about avocado toast. It is about a basic arithmetic of survival. Sarah Jenkins, who runs a community centre in Doncaster and has no children, said: 'I am 34.
I earn 26,000 pounds a year. My rent is 800 a month for a one-bedroom flat. My partner earns similar.
Even if we scraped together the deposit for a house, we would be trapped by the mortgage. And then what? Childcare for a baby is 1,000 a month or more.
It is a net loss. We would be poorer. We would be stressed.
We would be letting a child down. So we decided no.' The study also reveals a scarred generational memory.
The women surveyed grew up watching their own mothers and aunties struggle with the 'mummy wars' of the 1990s and 2000s, squeezed between work and home. They then entered the labour market after the 2008 crash, into a gig economy with zero-hour contracts and stagnant pay. 'They are not risk-takers because the system has taught them not to be,' Dr.
Patel said. 'They have seen the cost of a mistake.' There is a stark regional divide in the data.
In London and the South East, where housing costs are highest, the percentage of women saying they will not have children jumps to 56%. In the North East and Scotland, it drops to 38%. This is the geography of the new family divide: the places where a child is affordable are the places where jobs are scarce.
The government's response has been to talk about 'family friendly' policies and to increase free childcare hours. But the study's authors say it is not enough. 'The free hours are useful, but they do not cover the full cost, and they do not address the housing crisis or the wage stagnation,' said Dr.
Patel. 'Until you make the sums work for ordinary women, this trend will continue. It is a quiet revolution, happening behind closed doors.
It is not a protest. It is a choice, forced by necessity.' For the women who have already made that choice, there is a mix of relief and grief.
'Part of me mourns the child I will not have,' said Sarah. 'But the other part is realistic. This is not the 1950s.
You cannot raise a family on a prayer and a good job. You need actual money.' The study is a mirror held up to the economy we have built.
It shows a nation where the most personal, human decision – whether to bring a life into the world – is now determined by a spreadsheet. And the spreadsheet does not compute.








