British Jews have to pay close to $18,500 a year in extra costs to maintain a Jewish lifestyle, according to a new study released on Thursday.

Andrea Silberman, an economist at the Treasury, and Ernst and Young consultant Anthony Tricot conducted research that shows the hefty costs associated with purchasing kosher food, having property in Jewish areas, synagogue membership and paying for Jewish schools in the UK. In total, they found a Jewish lifestyle in the UK can have annual costs of £12,700 per family, which comes out to $13,843.

The biggest cost for Jewish families are property prices, according to the study. They will pay a little over $6,400 per year more for their home than a non-Jewish family. The study stated that one fifth of British Jews are concentrated in the north London borough of Barnet, where property prices are 157 percent higher than average prices for England and Wales.

The second biggest expense for Jewish families is paying for Jewish state schools, which, according to the study, charge an annual premium of up to $2,180 per child “to reflect the cost of additional religious education.”

The study also found that kosher meat is, on average, double the price of non-kosher meat and families eating out at restaurants that serve kosher meals will pay 70 percent more than those eating other restaurants. Dining out costs Jewish families an additional $1,636 per year.

Synagogue membership costs between between $654-872 per household due in part of to the Jewish requirements for burial, which is triple the amount of cremation. Jewish celebrations add an extra cost of close to $1,200 per year for Jewish families.

“Simchahs are a further significant cost, driven by the need to ‘keep up with the Cohens,'” researchers explained. “The average Jewish wedding was reported this year to cost £55,000 (an estimated $59,975) compared to a UK average of under half that amount, while bar and bat mitzvahs represent a significant additional cost that is specific to the Jewish community.”

Other costs not taken into account in the study include a tour to Israel at the age of 16, gap years to Israel post-university and kosher Passover holidays, which include a mark up of 400 percent over regular prices.

The study also noted that average earnings for a Jewish household in the UK are roughly 54 percent higher than the UK average. A Jewish dual income household earns $25,724 more than the UK average, based on analysis of UK national statistics.