Details here.

I have most of the big details sorted, but because I am going to be new in the country aside from a few family visits and one business trip, I have far from expert knowledge on living in the UK. I try to research as much as I can, but there are limits.

These questions are going to probably be subjective, and some may be dependent on where we’re going to live in Britain long-term, something I can’t tell you until I get a job, but I trust people on Lemmy more than some random Google search to tell me what they actually think.

So, here are my 20 questions- although some are really multipart questions- and I will probably end up asking more based on what I find out. I felt like 20 was an exhausting enough number. They are not in any particular order, I had about 8 and then I kept thinking of others and stopped trying to organize them. Please feel free to answer as many or as few as you like. Assume we won’t be getting rich off of my salary, but also won’t be living in a council flat.

  1. Which mobile phone company would you recommend and why? Getting a UK phone number for both me and my daughter is going to be one of the very first things on my itinerary.
  2. Obviously, I will need a place to put my money. I would rather go with a building society than a bank. Which would you recommend?
  3. Which supermarket(s) would you recommend? Which should we avoid and why? Believe it or not, my daughter is happy to eat the cheap supermarket sushi they have in supermarkets here. Is that available there?
  4. What should I think about when getting us a GP? I have health issues and need to get a National Insurance number as quickly as possible, but should I wait until we have a more permanent place to live? What are my options there?
  5. My daughter is a 14-year-old neurodivergent lesbian who has no problem letting people know exactly what she thinks and also likes to go on long tangents about esoteric subjects that interest her, which makes it difficult enough for her to find friends in the U.S., but I have no idea how she’s going to find friends in the UK. She will hopefully make some in school (it’s sure as hell been hard for her here, and it’s going to be hard on her there being foreign), but I’d love other suggestions on ways she might make friends in the UK that might not be a way in the U.S. She is super into Japanese stuff, but slightly off Japanese stuff, like obscure anime and electronica bands from the 1970s and 1980s, although she also loves punk rock and Hello Kitty 🤷. She also is a very talented artist and spends all day sketching in sketchbooks and on her iPad.
  6. This is going to sound really stupid… do I just carry around my passport or how do I show ID if someone needs it? I’m not going to have a driving license.
  7. What difficulties do you think I might encounter trying to rent a flat or house? I really don’t know how the process works in Britain. In the U.S. they often do a credit check and you provide first and last month’s rent, plus a security deposit. Utilities are not always included.
  8. Once we get settled, is Ikea the best place to go to get furniture (I don’t find what they have to be all that comfortable), or are the similar affordable options?
  9. How about house wares? We care much more about utility over aesthetics, especially when getting established. I’d rather have cheap, durable plates and bowls and pots and pans than pretty, expensive ones.
  10. And how about clothing? I do not care at all about fashion, I just want decent clothing that will look appropriate at a job. Obviously, I have plenty of that already, but it will need to be replaced eventually. Where do I go for cheap and durable over expensive and fashionable?
  11. Are ISPs as dependent on where you live as they are here? We have very few options available and they are entirely geographically dependent. ISP recommendations would be great. I would especially love an ISP that didn’t have data caps.
  12. If I watch everything on a monitor via my computer, do I still need to pay a TV license fee or do I only need to play it if I want to use iPlayer? How does that all work? I definitely will not have an actual TV for a while.
  13. My daughter’s absolute favourite breakfast treat is going to a diner and getting corned beef hash. Is that a thing over there? Is there an okay breakfast place to take her to so she can have it once in a while?
  14. I’m guessing this is a no, but if anyone knows of anywhere in the UK that serves decent Mexican food, even if it is just somewhere I can take her to as a weekend treat, please tell me. That is her absolute favourite kind of food in general. By “Mexican food,” I mean “the shit they call Mexican food in America which isn’t really Mexican food” (you might notice I’m not a fan), so you would have to be familiar with both in order to answer this.
  15. I have been looking for a long time and I just haven’t found anything good- does anyone know a video or series of videos I can show to my kid as a basic “life in the UK in the 2020s as a teen” primer? I try to tell her all that I can, but it’s not like I can tell her what it’s like to be a teen in the UK in 2025. I was last there as an adult in the 2000s, before she was even born, and Britain was already a noticeably different place from the last time I was there in the 1990s. I mean I know she’s going to make a lot of cultural faux pas, but it would be nice to find a way to minimize them beyond me telling her things like what “pants” means in the UK and that “cunt” is not thought of in the UK as the horrific word it’s considered to be in the U.S.
  16. This is just something I’ve been wondering from job ads: when they say “casual dress,” what do they mean? In the U.S. that means you can show up in a T-shirt and sweats. I don’t want to make my own faux pas there.
  17. If we end up having to move to Wales- I am interviewing for a job in Swansea this week- it’s my understanding that my daughter will have to study Welsh in school. Does anyone have any experience moving to Wales with a teenager who is suddenly put into a (what I assume would be very remedial) Welsh language class? Any advice there?
  18. I basically never carry cash on me in the U.S. at this point. What might I need to carry it for there or is it also unnecessary?
  19. Do UK institutions care about your US credit rating?
  20. I hate Marmite. Is that still a capital offence?
  • wewbull
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    4 days ago

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    1. Unlocked handsets, and then try a few pay-as-you-go sims until you find which network is good in your area. Then move to a sim-only contract if you find you need to.

    2. Probably can’t go wrong with Nationwide. I don’t use them myself but I see people using them quite often, and they seem to be keeping their local branches open.

    3. There are levels of supermarket. Waitrose is known as pricey but good. Sainsbury’s probably next. Tesco. Lidl, Aldi, Morrisons, Asda. None of them are bad. All good food, but will get cheaper as you move through the list and less fancy. Once you’ve hit Tesco’s though they’re all pretty similar, except I think Tesco price gouges unless you’re on the loyalty card.

    4. Just register at a local surgery (=clinic) when you get here, and when you move you can change where you’re registered.

    5. The key with making friends for everyone is to maximize opportunities for it to happen. School is one, but group activities is another. What does she do that makes her happy?

    6. No ID needed if you’re obviously an adult. Only time people need to see ID is to check your age. (Bars, buying medicines, etc) But if you’re obviously over 18 leave your passport at home.

    7. Lack of financial history might be an obstacle, so people will want to know you’ve got a regular income.

    8. Furniture stores will be on most shopping estates (kinda where the superstores are). Furniture Village. Next, Dunelm, The Range are a few I see near me.

    9. Big supermarkets can be a good first stop for most houseware.

    10. Go to your local shopping centres. You have lots of options for clothes.

    11. ISPs are all national I think. There’s a few big ones BT, Virgin Cable, Plusnet, but I’m personally with a smaller one called Andrews and Arnold. A bit more expensive but the service is really good.

    12. If you consume any programming from BBC or Channel 4 then yes, you need a license. Post office will sort you out.

    13. No idea on this one

    14. Mexican food hasn’t properly made it to the UK. I say that as someone with Mexican family members. There are mexican restaurants (Chiquittos for example) but they’re not great. Wasn’t part of the British empire you see.

    15. Apart from “U.K. Culture Shock” type videos on you-tube… I dunno.

    16. Not “sweats”. That’s for around the house at the weekend. “Casual” means you don’t need to wear a suit, so jeans, t-shirt (but not offensive) and sweater. Be presentable on day 1 and you can adjust from there. Better a little too smart than underdressed.

    17. No idea.

    18. Largely unnecessary since COVID, but I still carry a few tenners with me just in case.

    19. I don’t think they care

    20. Absolutely. Expect to be imprisoned as you get off the plane.