b3ta.com qotw
You are not logged in. Login or Signup
Home » Question of the Week » Money-saving tips » Post 1429606 | Search
This is a question Money-saving tips

I'm broke, you're broke, we're all broke. Even the smug guy on the balcony with the croissant hasn't got two AmEx gold cards to rub together these days. Tell everybody your schemes to save cash.

(, Thu 10 Nov 2011, 18:09)
Pages: Latest, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, ... 1

« Go Back

Simple little things.
Buying things like toilet roll, cling film, herbs/spices, flour, diluting juice, apple/orange juice etc. Switch to the shops own brand (I don't mean the "budget brands", simply their own ones. A lot of the times the difference in quality is negligible and the difference in price can really stack up.
Unless you go through tons of the stuff ignore BOGOF or Buy 3 for 2 etc offers. I once bought 3 jars of coffee (for the price of 2) at £6.50 each. Realising once I got home that I rarely drink coffee and it would take me months to get through these but I'd spent more than double than I needed to. Same with cereal, biscuits etc where I end up forgetting about them and binning them months later.
Instead go for ones with a bit of money off them, get what you really want or something close to it, for less than you would be paying.

Try to cut down on takeaways or eating out, some nights I've seen me have nothing in the house and get a takeaway for £8/9 that I could've used for shopping and fed myself twice over.

Cook stuff and freeze the extra etc.
(, Sun 13 Nov 2011, 16:14, 6 replies)
Cereal is one of the few things I get from the supermarket,
because I actually prefer the own brand ones to Kellogg's.
(, Sun 13 Nov 2011, 16:27, closed)

"because it would take months to get through"...

This is quite irrelevant, if you've got the room.
For example.
I occasionally like a can of beans.
Maybe once a week or two.
Tesco had an offer for 3 packs of 4 cans of beans for the price of one.
This was 80% of the price of even Tesco value beans - which I don't really like.
So, I got 18*4 cans.
Even comparing against the price of value beans, investing 14 pounds now, saved me 3 pounds.
Very, very few speculative investments can get this sort of return.

My shopping tends to look weird.
For example, last month I bought no meat, and 30Kg of flour.
Flour was on 3 for 2, and I use it regularly for breadmaking - 30Kg will last me 3 months or so.

I'd bought meat the month before, when it was half-off roasting joints, at a very good price, and won't be buying any for at least 3 months.

However.
To do this effectively, you need a large freezer, and the knowledge of what items normally cost, and to understand the offers.
For example, the 3 for 2 offer was on a wide variety of goods - however - it was 'cheapest free'. So you maximise the savings by only buying items of a similar price on the offer.
You also need to understand the alternatives.
If you like both apples and oranges, but for no good reason buy one one week, and one the other, then noticing the price may be a good plan.
Sometimes one is cheaper than the other.
If apples are on buy-one-get-one free, but oranges are cheaper, and you like them just as much - the orange is a better buy.

I'm spending about 60 quid/month on food, and eating reasonably well.
This should drop over the next months to about 50, as I hit my desired 6 month stock levels on most non-perishables.
(, Sun 13 Nov 2011, 17:45, closed)

If I ever started thinking about shopping like this, I'd go to the shed and hang myself.
(, Sun 13 Nov 2011, 17:56, closed)
Eh ?
That comment doesn't really tie in with your answer to Conspicuous Consumption
(, Sun 13 Nov 2011, 19:09, closed)
the key sentence in that story is "some years ago"

(, Sun 13 Nov 2011, 20:23, closed)
It's this.
Or a _considerably_ less varied and nice diet.
Or no heating.
(, Sun 13 Nov 2011, 19:47, closed)

« Go Back

Pages: Latest, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, ... 1