Bristol's Caddy family trade places with the Williams family from Weston-super-Mare. The Caddys spend more than £1700 per week, compared to the Willams's £110 weekly budget.
The wealthy Bentley swap house and lifestyle with hard-working and hard-up, single mother-of-four Angela Carter-Begbie.
The Hays are in the wealthiest 10 percent in Britain. The Hellings are in the poorest 10 percent. How will they both adapt to each other's lives?
The Webb family leave their rented three-bedroom maisonette on an estate to live in the Heasman family's luxury 16th-century farmhouse set in six acres in rural Essex.
The Fiddes family from Royal Wootton Bassett rank in the top ten percent of Britian's wealthiest. They swap places with the Leamon family who are among the nation's poorest 10 per cent.
The Haslems have three children, 12 restaurants, and £3,000 pound a week to spare. They swap with a family with four children but a weekly budget of just £140 .
The Sethard-Wrights from Orpington swap homes, budgets and lives with the Walker family from Bromley. The two families live just five miles away from each other but their financial circumstances are worlds apart.
Single mother Claire Lee leaves her terraced home in Wolverhampton to live in a 5-bedroom home belonging to cardiologist and paediatrician Mahrous and Rana Alsoud.
Successful vets Colin and Lizzy Whiting enjoy spending their disposable income on antiques. Marine engineer Ross Timmins and his wife Sarah, a hairdresser, work hard to budget what fund they have.
The Scaife-Lacy family are used to a weekly budget of £2,700, which they splash out on skiing trips. Restricted to around £170 each week, the Flinthams and their four children make do with free activities.
The Page family swap their eight bedroom house in West Yorkshire for a week in the Hollands' three-bed council house in Hartlepool.
Paul Walker and Victoria Maude have a weekly post-bills budget of £1,716, while Steve and Naz Edney have around £168 per week to spare. The Edneys hope that the swap will inspire their kids to work hard.
Sam and Richard Flint and their four children from a seven bedroom house in Hertfordshire change places with Nora and Lahoussine Elayadi and their three children, who love in a two bedroom council flat in Ealing, West London.
James wants to help episode buddy Antony realise his dreams of attaining a physics degree. Karate entrepreneur Matt has taken Andy under his wing, and finding out if bin lady Sharon's situation has changed.
The Colemans are in top tier for wealth, with a four bedroom house and a weekly budget of £1,800. However, the Morgans are among the poorest with a weekly budget of just £158 - less than a tenth of the Colmans.
In Bournemouth, the Hansen and Gittings families swap homes, budgets and lives. They live just three miles away from each other, but their financial circumstances are worlds apart with the Hansen's among the wealthiest and the Gittings the poorest.
The Hornans are among the wealthiest in Britain, with luxury holidays, swimming lessons and a weekly budget of more than £2k. The Llewellyns are among the poorest, and dream only of owning their own home with a garden for the kids to play in.
The Emmotts enjoy a budget of £1300 per week, affording golf, tennis, music and triathlon training. The Blakes have only £125 of disposable income, so treats include walks in the park and film nights. They swap lives to see how the other half lives.
The well off Lusks, who made their money from the manufacturing industry, swap places with the Bosleys who are used to getting by on less than one tenth of the Lusks income, brought in by mum Melanie who is a cleaner at a working men's club.
Families from series two and three reveal what happened when they met for the first time after living each other's lives. Intersperses memorable moments with newly shot footage.
Terri-Ann Nunn went from a council flat to a life of luxury thanks to her diet business. The Ross family squeeze five kids into a three-bed renter.
Property developer Claire Donovan and her family swap homes and lives with DIY warehouse worker Jason White and his brood.
Single mother Andrea swaps her two-bedroom community housing in Lambeth for Geeta's GDP7m four-storey townhouse in Chelsea.
The wealthy Jones family swap their ten-bedroom Victorian mansion for the Robinson family's three-bed council property.
Rich retired couple Shahid and Riffat have worked hard all their lives planning for their retirement, managing to build their own home. Cleaner Kelly spends all her attention and money on her two sons, who live with her in their council house.
Millonaire property developer Immanuel and his adult children swap homes, lives and budgets with single mum Amy and her two kids.
Lincolnshire landowner Robert and his archaeologist wife Marina swap their 5,000 acre estate for Andy and Siobahn's former council house near Leeds.
The Lee family swap their large Victorian house for the Wood family's council house. However, life is far from straightforward for either family.
An entrepreneurial couple who own nearly 80 properties swap lives with a couple who have a young child, and live in a rented house.
Single-mum Anna, who lives on the breadline, swaps lifestyles with two successful guys who live in apartments in a Victorian Mansion in Leeds.
A family swap their house in Bradford, for a pad in Kent.
Businessman Adam and his father Ian, who live in a four-bedroom mansion in Essex, swap with single mum Kiptieu, who lives in a small council flat in Abbey Wood, London. With a number of successful businesses under his belt, Adam now travels round the world, interviewing the great and the good from showbusiness, sport and business, including the likes of John Travolta, 50 Cent and Floyd Mayweather, sharing their stories of success with clients who are willing to pay Adam thousands for the inside track. Kiptieu fled war-torn Sierra Leone and is a widow bringing up her three daughters in a two-bedroom ground-floor flat. Kiptieu also recently lost her job because of the Covid-19 pandemic, so the family budget is tighter than ever.
A family, who enjoy a weekly disposable income of around £1200, are swapping lives for a week with Mike, Natalie, and their two young daughters. They hail from Coleshill on the outskirts of Birmingham, where they survive on just over £75 a week.
A former city banker's family struggle on under £150 a week, while Jade and Dean and their five kids don't know how to spend their weekly allowance of £1300.
Exploring if money buys happiness. Trevor and Marie swap their four-bedroom, three-bathroom detached house, with Michael and Natasha who get by on £100 a week.
Multi-millionaire property investor Ayo and his best friend Patrick swap their luxury lifestyle with Jodie and her family who get by on £53 a week.
Kamil's businesses turn over £3m a year and he makes over £40,000 profit every month, while his partner Francesca runs a successful lingerie company. They trade places with Derbyshire couple Mel and Sophie and their seven-month-old son Teddy, who live in a three-bedroom rented property in Derbyshire and exist on just £56 a week after bills for all their shopping and travel.
In this episode, digital marketing company CEO Kelly Filistad, her husband Rob and their two daughters trade places with Natalie and Nikki Ryan and their three children, who live on around £99 a week.
Single mum Naomi and her three children live in Walthamstow, east London, on £60 a week after bills are taken into account. They head to a luxury six-bedroom, six-bathroom property in Hertfordshire that is home Toni and her 27-year-old daughter Dayan, who are both successful businesswomen.
Kim and Dave have risked everything by converting a field in Northumberland into an organic farm, growing fruit and vegetables, and raising rare-breed pigs and other animals, but rarely have time off and money is tight. They and their two children swap lives and homes with millionaire businesswoman Ampika, who lives just outside Manchester.
A family leaves their four-bedroom terrace house on a council estate to live in a six-bedroom house set in 60 acres.
Australian tech millionaire Harry and his friend Hadia swap their Shoreditch £1million apartment for Angel and Santana's one-bedroom council flat in the poor end of Notting Hill. Harry made his money from his firm that specialises in digital marketing, while money is a massive worry for the couple and their children, but Angel dreams of working in digital marketing and Santana wants to run her own skincare business.
In this week's episode, can a wealthy New Age family help a pole-dancing mum's dream come true? Andrea and Matt Callanan are self-confessed hippies from Cardiff and live in a large Victorian property with son Alby. They've made a mint coaching success online, but there's nothing conventional about their methods. Algae smoothies, meditation and hypnosis are part of their daily ritual, not to mention giving money away to total strangers on the street. Living their unusual lives for a week are the Burrows from Bristol. Dad Ant is a delivery driver, and with mum Tash and kids Kaela and Tate, they have just £71 a week to live off after bills. Money is a massive struggle, but that doesn't stop them hoping for a better life. Tash took up pole-dancing to combat post-natal depression and has just started giving classes, but the tiny business is hardly breaking even. Enter Andrea Callanan, whose speciality is helping mums succeed. What will she make of Tash's big idea after a twirl on the pole h
In this week's episode, a single mum with four jobs has big ambitions to start her own food business. Can a super-successful entrepreneur help make her dream come true? To put it mildly, Sue Bowers works hard. She lives in Ashby, Scunthorpe, in a two-bed terrace house with her 16-year-old son James, and works four jobs to keep afloat. She's a carer on Mondays, an assistant nurse Tuesday to Friday, she's a cleaner on Saturdays, and on Sundays she flips burgers. Sue does all she can to make ends meet and provide the best she can for 16-year-old James, but the jobs are low wage, and she has just £70 a week disposable income. Sue has a big dream though. Working for the NHS, she discovered the health benefits of hemp and wants to drop all her jobs and start a hemp food business. Swapping homes and living with Sue and James for a week are the Bradleys. Dad Nick, mum Sarah Jane and daughters Megan and Lucy have enjoyed a quite unbelievable success story. Nick originally trained as a primary s
What happens when new-money and old-money millionaires swap lives?
Devoted single Essex mum Ocean is desperate to build a better life for her eight-year-old daughter Oziana, but surviving on less than £60 a week is a huge struggle, and she dreams of leaving it all behind by opening a Caribbean food business. She swaps lives with multimillionaire Barrie and husband Scott, who have built a staggeringly successful business empire stretching from Beverley Hills to Chelmsford
Dr Rashpal Singh and his wife Kiran own a successful cosmetics clinic and live with their four chidren in a large comfortable property in the suburbs of Middlesbrough. They swap lives for a week with Co Durham single mum Natalee, who survives on just £60 a week after bills and has taken out loans to try to start up her own nail business
For one week, charity worker Julie and her two daughters swap homes and lives with millionaire consultant Jazz and his fiancee Catia. The result is a life-changing experience on both sides as they discover the realities of how the other half live, as well as a lovely surprise for Julie at the end of the programme.
The well off Hogan family swap places with the less well off Buck family for a festive Christmas week at the opposite end of the wealth divide. Though the two live just 13 miles away, their financial circumstances are worlds apart.