Growing up outside Manchester, my family never had much money. My dad worked at the factory, my mum picked up shifts at the local shop when she could. We weren’t poor, but we weren’t exactly comfortable either. Every penny counted.
Years later, after becoming the first in my family to go to university and building a career in London, I started noticing something interesting. Despite earning more than my parents ever did, I still caught myself doing things that traced directly back to those formative years.
The thing about growing up lower-middle-class is that it shapes you in ways you don’t even realize. These behaviors become so ingrained, so automatic, that they feel like personality traits rather than learned responses to economic uncertainty.
I’ve spent considerable time observing these patterns in myself and others who share similar backgrounds. What I’ve found is fascinating: many of us carry these habits well into our adult lives, regardless of how our financial situation changes.
1. They keep food past its best-before date
Ever find yourself sniffing the milk that’s a day past its date, deciding it’s probably fine? That’s classic lower-middle-class programming right there.
When you grow up in a household where grocery money is tight, you learn that best-before dates are suggestions, not commandments. You develop an almost scientific approach to food safety: the smell test, the visual inspection, the tiny taste to confirm.
I still do this, despite being able to afford fresh groceries whenever I want. Just last week, I found myself defending slightly wilted lettuce to a friend who was visiting. “It’s perfectly fine if you just remove the outer leaves,” I said, realizing halfway through my explanation how unnecessary this frugality had become.
2. They feel guilty about small luxuries
Want to spot someone who grew up counting pennies? Watch them wrestle with buying the fancy coffee.
Even when you can afford it, there’s this internal voice that questions every non-essential purchase. Should I really get the large instead of the medium? Do I need the brand-name cereal when the store brand is half the price?
This guilt extends beyond food. It’s the hesitation before buying new clothes when the old ones still technically work. It’s the mental math that happens automatically, converting prices into hours worked, even when you’re no longer living paycheck to paycheck.
3. They stockpile when things are on sale
My London flat has limited storage, yet I still find myself buying three tubes of toothpaste when they’re on offer. Old habits die hard.
This compulsion to stock up during sales comes from a deep-seated fear of scarcity. When you’ve experienced times when running out of something meant going without until the next payday, you develop a hoarding instinct around good deals.
The rational part of my brain knows I can buy toothpaste anytime. But the part shaped by my upbringing sees a sale and thinks: better safe than sorry.
4. They DIY everything possible
YouTube has been both a blessing and a curse for those of us with this particular trait. Why pay someone when you could probably figure it out yourself?
Growing up, calling a professional for anything other than absolute emergencies was unthinkable. Leaky tap? Dad would fix it. Car making a weird noise? Time to pop the hood and have a look.
I’ve mentioned this before, but this DIY mentality extends far beyond home repairs. It’s doing your own taxes even when an accountant might save you money. It’s cutting your own hair during lockdown and convincing yourself it doesn’t look that bad.
5. They keep empty containers “just in case”
My kitchen cupboard is a graveyard of takeaway containers and glass jars. Every empty jar is potentially useful. Every plastic container could store something someday.
This isn’t hoarding in the clinical sense. It’s the deeply ingrained belief that everything has potential value. That empty jam jar could hold screws in the garage. That yogurt container is perfect for leftovers.
When you grow up without much, you learn to see potential in everything. Throwing away something that could be useful feels wasteful, almost morally wrong.
6. They apologize for their living space
“Sorry about the mess,” I say, despite my flat being perfectly presentable. This automatic apology isn’t about actual messiness. It’s about deeply internalized class anxiety.
When your childhood home was modest, you develop a preemptive defensiveness about your space. You assume others are judging it as not good enough, too small, too basic.
Even now, living in a decent London flat, I find myself making excuses. The furniture isn’t matching because I’m still deciding on a style. The kitchen is small but functional. These apologies tumble out before guests even have a chance to form an opinion.
7. They avoid doctors unless absolutely necessary
“It’s probably nothing” becomes a mantra when you grow up weighing every expense.
Yes, the NHS means healthcare is free at the point of use, but the mindset persists. Time off work might mean lost wages. Prescriptions cost money. Better to tough it out unless it’s serious.
This extends to dental care, mental health support, and preventive medicine. The idea of paying for therapy or regular health checkups feels indulgent when you’ve been programmed to see healthcare as something for emergencies only.
8. They feel uncomfortable being served
Restaurants with waitstaff who refill your water glass make me slightly uneasy. Having someone clean my hotel room while I’m still in it? Deeply uncomfortable.
This discomfort with being served stems from identifying more with the server than the served. You know what it’s like to be on the other side of that equation, or your parents did.
There’s an urge to over-tip, to stack your own plates, to apologize for making work for someone. You can’t fully relax into being catered to because it feels fundamentally wrong.
9. They have a complicated relationship with brands
Designer labels create an internal conflict. Part of you wants them as symbols of having “made it.” Another part sees them as wasteful displays of wealth you don’t quite feel entitled to.
You might buy the designer item but remove the label. Or you buy it but feel compelled to mention you got it on sale. There’s this constant negotiation between wanting nice things and feeling like you’re betraying your roots by having them.
10. They always have a backup plan
Financial security feels perpetually fragile when you’ve seen how quickly things can go wrong.
Even with steady employment and savings, there’s always a Plan B running in the background. What if I lose my job? What if the economy tanks? What if this all goes away?
This manifests in various ways: keeping skills updated “just in case,” maintaining networks in multiple industries, always having a side hustle idea ready to activate. Security never feels quite secure enough.
The bottom line
These behaviors aren’t necessarily problems to be fixed. They’re part of who we are, shaped by where we come from. Some of them, like resourcefulness and financial awareness, can be genuine strengths.
What matters is recognizing them for what they are: responses to circumstances that may no longer apply. Once you understand why you do these things, you can choose whether to keep them or let them go.
The irony is that many of these habits that once served as survival mechanisms can hold us back from fully enjoying the success we’ve worked so hard to achieve. But they also keep us grounded, grateful, and connected to our roots.
Growing up lower-middle-class leaves its mark. These patterns run deep, surfacing in moments when we least expect them. And that’s okay. They’re reminders of where we’ve been and how far we’ve come.


















