A rich millennial's blog about she survives in Manhattan on a $25 an hour intern's salary has gone viral after she revealed her family paid her rent, college tuition, phone bill AND still give her $1,100 in allowance.

While many interns struggle to make ends meet, especially in an expensive city like New York, this 21-year-old marketing intern described a life of luxury; partying at her friends' place in the Hamptons, working out at her $210 a month high end gym or tucking into a $23 goat cheese wrap.

When she's not bored, 'online shopping' or journaling at her job, she is checking off millennial cliches with avocado toast and hot yoga.

A rich millennial's blog about she survives in Manhattan on a $25 an hour intern's salary has gone viral after she revealed her family paid her rent, college tuition, phone bill AND still give her $1,100 in allowance (stock image)

In one diary entry, she wrote that she had 'seriously contemplate(d) going around my office asking for work' because she was 'beyond bored.'

Instead, she choose to focus her productivity on snacking on olives and watching the England v. Croatia World Cup game in her office's conference room.

On another day, she states she 'spent most of my day researching podcasts for 'living your best life.''

Refinery 29's Money Diaries asks millennials to note 'how they spend their hard-earned money during a seven-day period'.

But spending your parents and grandparents' money appears to be far more fun.

'#Blessed,' as she put it.

MANHATTAN LIVING ON AN 'INTERN' BUDGET INCOME Weekly income from internship: $747.50 Weekly income from babysitting: $50-$60 Monthly allowance from parents: $800 Monthly allowance from grandfather: $300 Monthly rent check from parents: $2,100 MONTHLY TOTAL: $4330 EXPENSES Rent: $0 (paid for by parents) Student loan: $0 (tuition paid for by parents) Health insurance: $0 (covered by parents' plan) Phone bill: $0 (uses parents' plan) Netflix, Spotify and Amazon: $0 (uses parents' accounts) Monthly Sugared + Bronzed Pass: $40.76 Monthly Equinox Membership: $210 Monthly MoviePass: $9.95 Weekly food and drink: $266.23 (more than $1,000 a month) Weekly spend on clothes and beauty: $45.95 Weekly transport (mainly Lyft and Uber): $61.35 MONTHLY EXPENSES: $1754.83 Advertisement

The Money Diarist writer, who has not been named, revealed she barely has any essential outgoings to pay for; her parents pay her $2,100 rent for a West Village apartment building which comes with its own in-house cobbler.

She writes that the one bedroom apartment costs $4,050 a month but she splits it with a roommate who lives in the den.

Her parents also pay her tuition and phone bill, while she is covered under their health plan, and she even uses their Netflix, Spotify and Amazon accounts.

Selflessly, she does stump up the $9.95 for a monthly MoviePass out of her own pocket.

She's free to splurge more than a $1,000 a month on food and drink, pays $40.76 for her monthly wax and chooses to get ride sharing services such as Uber and Lyft, explaining: 'I haven't considered getting the unlimited (subway) pass because I don't use the subway that much over the weekend.'

Occasionally though, misfortune can affect even the most privileged of us. In one harrowing entry, she detailed how her friend's father had offered to take them out on his private yacht.

She decided to go tubing first while some of her other friends went straight onto the boat.

'All the rosé is gone by the time we raft up,' she complained.

Thankfully, her 'friend's chef' was on hand later that evening to prepare them dinner.

Other interesting revelations was how often she and her friends would Venmo each other, for the most insignificant things, such as $5 for having a few drinks from someone's Bacardi during their 'pregame'.

She was also quite unhappy with two of her friends when they failed to immediately pay her for their share in a Lyft home from a party in the Hamptons.

Despite her thousands of dollars of disposable income, she also wasn't afraid to ask for free food during a dinner out with a friend.

'I suggest to the waiter that he brings us some wine on the house, and he does,' she wrote, after a 45 minute wait for a table. 'He also brings us a panna cotta dessert with our check.'

She does share a few tips for saving money, such as using the Albert personal finance app.

'It's supposed to “smart save” for you by tracking how much you make and spend,' she wrote.

'So far, I've saved $113 to pay for my Equinox membership next month. It's sick!'

She added she'd only spent $55 on coffee last month which she described as 'not too bad.'

The intern revealed her typical day began with meditation and some avocado toast.

After a typically quiet morning, the woman said she's go out for lunch, sometimes meeting up with her boyfriend for a bite, before returning to the office for another quiet afternoon.

One day, she said she simply 'sat around and did nothing' for two hours until her afternoon meeting. On two of the four days she went to work during the week-long diary, she watched World Cup games in the office in the afternoon. Another day she worked on a 'small project, online shopping, and journaling.'

'Perk of being an intern is that I don't get too much work assigned in a day. But I do find myself bored occasionally.'

She revealed she almost always got out the office on the dot at 5pm, and seemed appalled on one day when she was forced to wait until 5.10pm.

'Finally leave work and go to Equinox for my yoga class. I am so zoned into the class, I can't believe it's over when we go into shavasana,' she wrote.

The 21-year-old would then cook herself something 'random' and go to bed late, describing one evening when she went to sleep at 11.36pm as 'a night earlier than I have in weeks.'

Unsurprisingly, the criticism on Twitter came hard and fast.

'YOU SHOULD NOT BE WRITING ABOUT MONEY, one tweet said, in all caps.

'I have never hated anyone like I hate the refinery29 money diary 'all of my income is disposable income' intern,' another wrote.

Others compared the woman's diary, to their own more pitiful blog.

Eli Goldstone wrote: 'Anyone wanna read my money diary? I stand in front of the yoghurts on the verge of tears deciding whether I deserve to buy the kind I like, then I have one single alcohol and drop kick my whole purse into the sea.'

Some joked it couldn't possibly be real.

'This money diary was manufactured in a factory specifically to trigger me as much as possible,' one Twitter user wrote.

Many were outraged a 21-year-old with no experience, who did such little work, earned more than them - even before her parents' help.

'I work 50 hours a week and freelance and her - weekly - internship pays almost as much as my BIWEEKLY paycheck. I am screaming at the sun. Time to log off 4ever,' a Twitter user wrote.

Others were simply baffled.

'What was in that wrap?!' asked one about the $23 goats cheese and avocado wrap.

The Washington Post even got in on the fun, running their own money diary written by a mysterious rich crime fighter who inherited his parents' mansion and butler.

He said he saves money by working out in his own Batcave, and skips subway fees by getting around in the Batmobile.