An arm and a leg
(PW)
A large amount of money
It cost an arm and a leg to fix the stove.
(UsingEnglish.com)
If something costs an arm and a leg, it is very expensive indeed.
(thePhraseFinder)
Meaning
A large, possibly exorbitant, amount of money.
Origin
It is in fact an American phrase, coined sometime after WWII. The earliest citation I can find is from The Long Beach Independent, December 1949:
Food Editor Beulah Karney has more than 10 ideas for the homemaker who wants to say "Merry Christmas" and not have it cost her an arm and a leg.
'Arm' and 'leg' are used as examples of items that no one would consider selling other than at an enormous price. It is a grim reality that, around that time, there are many US newspaper reports of servicemen who lost an arm and a leg in the recent war. It is quite likely, although difficult to prove conclusively at this remove, that the phrase originated in reference to the high cost paid by those who suffered such amputations.