“Cost an Arm and a Leg” — What It Means and How to Use It

As an English teacher, I have been creating content for both Korean learners and global English learners. This blog is where I share the expressions and idioms I cover in my lessons — and today’s expression is one you’ll use every time something is way too expensive: “Cost an arm and a leg.”


What does “cost an arm and a leg” mean?

“Cost an arm and a leg” means something is extremely expensive — so expensive that it feels like you’re giving up a part of your body to pay for it.

You use it when the price of something shocks you or feels completely unreasonable.


Real life examples:

  1. “That new iPhone costs an arm and a leg — I’ll wait for the price to drop.”
  2. “Dinner at that restaurant cost us an arm and a leg but it was worth it.”
  3. “Flying business class costs an arm and a leg.”
  4. “I wanted to buy a house in Seoul but it costs an arm and a leg.”
  5. “Good quality coffee doesn’t have to cost an arm and a leg.”

Where did this come from?

This expression became popular in the 20th century. The idea is simple — your arms and legs are the most valuable things you have. If something costs that much, it must be incredibly expensive.


Similar expressions:

  • “Break the bank” — spend more money than you can afford
  • “Doesn’t come cheap” — something is expensive
  • “Pricey” — informal word for expensive

Quick recap:

Cost an arm and a leg = extremely expensive. Next time you see a shocking price tag, you know exactly what to say! 💸


Want to learn more natural English?

Hi, I’m Yehs Sam 👋 I have been teaching English and creating content to help learners sound more natural and confident — for both Korean learners and global English learners.

🐢⚡ Turtle ZeusSlow but surely, we get there.


Is there a slang word or English expression you’ve always wanted to know? Drop it in the comments below — I’d love to cover it in my next post!

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