At the risk of being beaten about the head and shoulders, I'll supply ours. It's for a family of two. I know there is room for improvement, but hubby is not fully on board and never will be. And I'm not pushing it any further with him. I'm just adding our numbers for the other end of the spectrum here. I use rough classifications, anything bought at the grocery store is in the 'food' category, anything at Walmart is 'home'. Home/living includes home maintenance, internet/cable, clothing. Misc includes entertainment, so his hockey fees, the occaisonal concert etc. Most of the 'health' was reimbursed through our insurance, but I include it as a buffer in retirement (we'll be able to purchase group insurance as part of his retiree benefits which will probably be about the same cost). At least 95% of our meals are home cooked, predominately from scratch, but he's a big meat eater, and quite frankly, we can both tell the difference between meat from the butcher and grocery store, and the fish monger and the grocery store, so those stay in our future. I'm always interested in folks that seem to eat for < $5/day, but I don't see us doing it. For example, just the salad last night was $3 a serving, albeit a large serving, but when you add up the cost of romaine, tomatoes, avocados, pumpkin seeds, dressing, cheese (for him), it adds up.
food 10,000
vehicle/gas 4,400 (all vehicles are paid for)
home/living 7,300
travel 3,300
parking 2,300 (he drives to work, and parks in the building, not worth the fight)
booze 1,500
health 4,400
misc 2,500
restaurant 1,600 (the occasional lunch out for me, one meal out for the two of us once a month)
ins car/home/MC 7,400 (2 cars ,2 motorcycles, insurance is stupid expensive in Ontario)
cash 'stuff' 4,500 (mostly the entertainment budget)
property tax 7,000
total 56,200