MAT leave setup
Enter your key dates, salary, usual take-home pay, Child Benefit estimate and workplace maternity policy.
Editable spreadsheet planner
A calm UK spreadsheet for maternity pay, savings, baby costs and nursery fees.
The free calculators are great for a quick answer. The spreadsheet planner lets you add more personal details, including your usual take-home pay, employer maternity policy, savings, baby costs and nursery quotes, so the figures can feel more personal to you.
Once downloaded, the workbook is yours to keep. You can update it, refer back to it during maternity leave and use it as your own planning file whenever your dates, pay or childcare costs change.
One-off payment. Download the spreadsheet and keep it for your own planning.
Use this code for 50% off while the launch offer is live.
| Sheet | What it does | Type |
|---|---|---|
| MAT leave | Add dates, usual pay and employer maternity policy | Input |
| Monthly Forecast | See estimated maternity take-home and income gaps | Auto |
| Savings Target | Turn the pay drop into a savings plan | Auto |
| Nursery Fees | Estimate full days, half days, extras and funded hours | Auto |
Example figures for layout only. Your workbook updates from the details you enter.
From MAT leave setup through to nursery fees, baby costs and leave comparisons.
Built around the latest GOV.UK maternity pay and childcare assumptions.
Excel workbook and a Google Sheets-compatible version for launch.
Spreadsheet previews
These screenshots show the current workbook design using example figures. They help you see the tabs, layout and level of detail before you buy.
The pink cells are the only cells you need to fill in. The green cells are calculated by the planner using your details, so you can get a more personal breakdown than the quick calculators on the website.
Enter your key dates, salary, usual take-home pay, Child Benefit estimate and workplace maternity policy.
Add up to five workplace maternity pay stages, then let the workbook check and calculate the policy for you.
See estimated maternity take-home, Child Benefit, weeks included and the monthly income gap.
Inspect the weekly detail behind the forecast, including policy stage, SMP and estimated take-home pay.
Turn the forecast pay drop into a target, with suggested monthly and weekly savings.
Plan money going into your maternity savings pot, then see how it could top up lower-income months.
Budget for one-off setup costs and new monthly baby costs, with space to add actual spend later.
Estimate full days, half days, funded hours, extras and the average cost after funding.
Compare term-time and stretched funded-hours options in plain English before choosing a plan.
Compare 6, 9 and 12 months of leave against your current plan to see the broad income gap.
What it helps with
This is for the bit where maternity pay, unpaid leave, savings, nursery fees and returning to work all start overlapping.
How much maternity pay might I receive each month?
When could my pay drop, and by roughly how much?
How many unpaid weeks or months might I need to plan for?
What could I try to save before or during maternity leave?
What will nursery cost before funded hours start?
Would 6, 9 or 12 months of maternity leave feel more realistic?
How could funded childcare change my yearly nursery costs?
What baby setup costs and regular baby costs should I budget for?
Inside the workbook
Each sheet has a clear job. Pink cells are for your inputs, green cells calculate for you, and notes explain the assumptions in plain English.
Enter your due date, planned leave dates, usual pay and employer maternity policy in one clear place.
See a month-by-month estimate of usual take-home, maternity take-home, Child Benefit and income gap.
Inspect the weekly working behind the monthly view, including full pay, SMP-only weeks and unpaid weeks.
Turn the forecast income drop into a savings target, including money already saved, baby setup costs and a buffer.
Plan one-off baby setup costs and regular monthly baby costs using budgeted and actual amounts.
Estimate full-day and half-day nursery costs before funding, after funding and across different funding patterns.
Compare the estimated income gap for 6, 9 and 12 months of maternity leave alongside your current plan.
Keep the GOV.UK rates, assumptions and plain-English user guide alongside the workbook.
Decision support
The spreadsheet includes simple comparison views so you can compare broad options before getting lost in the smaller details.
Compare 6, 9 and 12 months of maternity leave, including estimated income gap, average monthly gap and unpaid weeks.
Compare broad nursery funding patterns so you can see how term-time and stretched hours may change the yearly cost.
How it works
Start with your dates, salary, usual take-home pay, employer maternity policy and nursery assumptions.
The workbook estimates pay, Child Benefit, nursery fees, savings targets and comparison views for you.
Compare leave lengths and nursery funding patterns before deciding what feels realistic for your family.
File formats
The first launch will focus on Excel and Google Sheets. Google Sheets is likely to be the easiest option for many families because it can be used for free with a Google account.
Best for the full designed workbook experience.
A compatible workbook version for planning in your browser. This is useful if you want a free way to open and use the planner.
Planned for a later release once the Numbers version has been fully tested.
Sources
The planner includes a source tab and is designed to work alongside the same GOV.UK assumptions used by the free calculators.
View sourcesQuestions
No. It is a planning spreadsheet to help you estimate and organise your money. Always check your employer policy, payslips, payroll team and GOV.UK guidance.
The planner is designed for budgeting, so it uses estimates and assumptions. Tax, National Insurance, pension, salary sacrifice and payroll timing can change your actual pay.
Yes. The launch version is planned for Excel and Google Sheets. Google Sheets is a helpful option because it is free to access with a Google account. An Apple Numbers version may be added later once it has been tested properly.
Not fully at the moment. The planner includes a Child Benefit estimate, but it does not calculate Universal Credit, tax credits or other benefit entitlement. Check GOV.UK or a benefits adviser for those.
Ready for the full planner?
Get the planner for £5.99 and use it alongside the free calculators to turn quick estimates into a practical spreadsheet you can keep, update and refer back to.
Opening offer: use code OPENINGPRICE for 50% off at checkout.