Welcome to Mommysavers Forums.
Go Back  
Money Matters Personal finance, managing debt, saving and investing


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes

Old 07-10-2006, 08:43 PM   #1
Default  
Kimberley
Mommysavers Goddess & Approved Trader
 
Kimberley's Avatar
 
Last Online: 08-21-2008 12:00 AM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: manitoba, Canada
Posts: 1,479
iTrader: (0)
Latest Blog Entry: ugh, some people
Blog Entries: 16
40 simple ways to put money in your pocket

How to tweak your lifestyle and save up to $15,000

By Anne Bokma

1. Pay off the plastic.
Are you making only the minimum payment on your credit card every month? If so, you could still be paying for that silk blouse long after it's faded and frayed. The average Canadian owes $1,269 to credit card companies. At 18 per cent interest, that's about $230 a year you could save if you paid your balance off each month.

2. Swap credit cards.
If you tend to carry a balance on your credit card, you would be better off switching to a low-interest card to ease your payment pain. There are no-frills cards that charge as little as 10 per cent versus the average 18 per cent. On a balance of $1,000, that eight per cent difference adds up to $80 over 12 months.

3. Get money for nothing (and your cheques for free).
Drive right on by any ATM machine that's not hooked up to your bank. You'll save $1.50 every time. And run from those generic cash machines you see at convenience stores. They charge an additional $1.50 or more on top of regular transaction fees, which means you could pay $3 just to take out $20. If you avoid ATM fees eight times a month all year long, you'll have an extra $144 in your pocket.

4. Be your own designer.
You may not have the style savvy of the experts on Trading Spaces, but that doesn't mean you can't try your hand at hanging wallpaper or laying linoleum. Instead of hiring a pro at $30 an hour for eight hours, paint that bedroom yourself and save at least $240.

5. Watch how your garden grows.
Annual bedding plants can soak up a wad of cash; you can easily spend $60 on a few trays of annuals that will wither before winter. You can save another $60 on perennials by swapping plants with friends and neighbours instead of going to the garden centre. Next spring forget the annuals, exchange favourite perennials with friends and grow $120 in the bank, instead.

6. Don't ring up phone charges.
Stick to basic service and ditch extra services you don't really need, such as call waiting ($6 a month), call display ($8) busy call return ($5) and inside wire-care maintenance insurance ($5). You'll save $288 a year.

7. Do a toy swap.
Instead of buying your kids every new toy that comes along, consider trading videos, toys or sports equipment with another family a few times a year. You'll get a bunch of new stuff to play with and it won't cost you a dime. Simply trading two video games (at $30 each) would save you $60.

8. Rethink insurance.
Increase the deductible on your home insurance from $250 to $500 and slash your annual rate by about 10 per cent. Upping the deductible to $1,000 results in another 10 per cent savings. A 20 per cent cut on an $800 policy ensures you have $160 in your wallet.

9. Be green and lean.
It costs about $250 to keep all those incandescent bulbs shining bright in your home every year. Switching to energy-efficient compact fluorescent lamps can shave $150 from that annual expense. They may cost more, but they last up to 10 times longer.

10. Empower your shower.
Low-flow shower heads cut the amount of hot water you use in half. With two 5-minute showers a day, you'll save $100 a year.

11. A cheaper way to chill.
Next summer, instead of cranking up the air conditioner, cool off under a ceiling fan. Fans cost about $1.50 to operate each month, while air conditioners cost up to $40 a month. In three months, you'll have a cool $115.

12. Pick up your pizza from a neighbourhood place.
If you order pizza each Friday, pick it up yourself and save on the delivery charge ($2.50) and tip ($2.50). (Prices often include the delivery cost. Ask them to give you the cost for a pickup.) That's $20 a month, or $240 a year more dough.

13. Keep the heat in.
If you combine all the cracks and leaks in a typical home, you'll end up with a 2.4-by-three-metre hole in the wall. Plug them up and pocket some cash. Caulking and weather-stripping can reduce your heating bill by up to 25 per cent, or $500 on $2,000 in annual heating costs.

14. Launder with care. Use cold water in the wash -- it works just as well and causes less shrinking and fading. If you run your dryer for 30 minutes, 20 times a month, it'll cost you $23 in energy alone. Instead, install a clothesline or set up a few drying racks. Switching two loads a week to cold water saves you $36 a year; add in the $276 for the dryer and you'll clean up with $312.


15. Slip on a sweater and slippers. Simply lowering your thermostat to 20 C (68 F) in winter can save on heating costs. Better yet, install a programmable thermostat and set it to turn the heat down automatically at night or when you leave home, and to turn it up before you wake or return. You'll save about 10 per cent on your heating costs -- or $200 on annual heating costs of $2,000.

16. Cook at home.
Eating out gobbles up money faster than the taxman. Brown-bag it to work and cook at home. Three lunches (at $7 each) and one family meal out a week ($50) comes to $284 a month, or $3,408 a year. Cut that back to one lunch a week and one family dinner a month and you'll pocket $2,472 a year.

17. Go veggie.
Pile on the beans, lentils, pasta or rice and have vegetarian dinners twice a week. You'll shave about $15 a week, or $780 a year off your grocery bill.

18. Shop at discount grocery stores.
They may not have exotic olive bars, and you'll have to bag your own groceries, but you can save big-time by going the no-frills route -- about 15 per cent to be precise. That's about $20 on a weekly $135 grocery trip, which bags you $1,040 over 12 months.

19. Be your own brewmaster.
Wine kits at do-it-yourself stores make it easy to bottle your own Barolo. It costs about $100 for 30 bottles of wine, or just over $3 a bottle. If you normally buy five bottles of wine a month at $10 each, you'll save $400 a year. If you're a beer drinker who goes through six cases of 24s a year, it would cost about $210. Make your own and you'll pay only $130, a savings of $80 a year. Total savings for alcohol: $480.

20. Opt for potluck.
Inviting friends for dinner? Share the load and lessen the expense by making it potluck. Make the main dish yourself and have others bring the rest. You could easily save yourself $25 on food and have more energy to be a great host. If you host six dinners a year, that's a savings of $150.

21. Pack your java.
You don't need to forgo your daily coffee habit, just make it at home and put it in a vacuum flask, instead. If you spend $3 on take-out coffee five days a week, that's $780 a year; make coffee at home and you'll pay about 30 cents a cup, or $78 for the year. Wake up to a savings of $702 -- more than enough to finance a fancy vacuum flask with change to spare.

22. Get some rabbit ears.
No one on her deathbed ever regrets not watching more "Judge Judy." If you can live without cable TV (minimum $25 a month), you can bank $300 a year. (Or reduce your 70-channel extended package, $45, to basic cable and save $240 a year.)

23. Simplify birthdays.
Who says kids' birthday parties have to rival the Oscars? Skip the pony rides, store-bought theme cake, expensive paper plates and loot bags. Have a home party or rent the local pool for a couple of hours and shave $100 off the party payout. With two kids you are $200 ahead.

24. Get thrifty.
Cruise the aisles at Value Village or your local secondhand shop. You're apt to find name-brand buys for yourself and your kids. If you normally spend $600 a year to outfit your child, you could do it for $250 instead. Annual saving (per person): $350.


25. Hit the garage sales.
Save on everything from books and toys to clothes and bikes. The key is to buy only essentials and not loads of stuff just because it's a bargain. It's a cinch to save $100 on household purchases if you check out these sales twice a year.


26. Shop with a strategy.
Plan your trips to the mall so you go with a purpose and avoid the impulse spending. If you normally make 10 trips to the mall a year and spend $50 on impulse buys each time, you could be saving $500.

27. Wait for the video.
A family of four can pay as much as $48 for tickets and $25 for food and drinks during a night out at the movies. Rent a video ($5) and make your own popcorn instead, and you'll save $408 if you would normally go to the show six times a year.

28. Indulge in some afternoon delight.
If you can't bear to miss hotly hyped first-run movies, go to a matinee instead. It'll cost a family of four $24. Skip the pricey popcorn and save another $25 on concession stand treats. Do this four times a year and save $196.

29. Make the library your local entertainment centre.
If you usually buy two softcover books a month (at $17 each), rent four videos (at $5 each) and pick up two magazines ($4 each), you can save $744 a year by using your library card instead.


30. Start a babysitting co-op.
Exchange babysitting services with friends or fellow parents at your kids' school and save the $6 an hour you'd pay for a teenager to come over while you're out. Even if you only go out twice a month for eight hours in total, you'll save $576 a year.

31. Say it with crayons.
Have your kids make homemade birthday cards for the slew of parties they get invited to. (They can do the same for relatives and teachers, too.) If you normally buy 10 cards a year (at $5 each), that's $50 you can pocket.

32. Rethink the fencing lessons.
Some kids' lessons and activities can cost $75 a month or more. Look for affordable programs at your local community centre. It can cost $80 a month ($960 a year) for your child to take karate classes at a karate school. A YMCA program can cost as little as $76 for three months ($304 a year). Kick the cost and save $656.

33. Pump it up.
If your tires aren't properly inflated, they'll require more energy to roll, which wastes gas. Keep them properly filled and you'll save five per cent on fuel costs. That's another $104 savings on gas.

34. Pitch a tent.
When you are planning next summer's vacation, think sleeping bags instead of hotel beds. Campsites are usually about $20 a night compared with a rented room at $130. A two-night getaway under the starry skies will save you $220 if you forgo the fancy suite. Make it a week and your nest egg grows by $770.

35. Give up your gym membership.
Hike the local trails or bike or jog around your hood. At $30 a month or more, you'll lighten your financial load by at least $360.

36. Drugstore savvy.
Instead of reaching for that brand-name headache remedy or cough syrup, opt for the generic store brand and save about 20 per cent off the price. If you normally buy 10 nonprescription products a year at $8 each, you'll save $16.

37. Up in smoke.
If you're one of the 26 per cent of Canadian women who smokes, think about what it's costing you in terms of both your health and your pocketbook. A three-pack-a-week habit burns up $96 a month, or $1,152 a year.

38. Fill 'er up.
Self-serve gas stations are about five per cent cheaper than full serves. If you spend $40 a week on gas ($2,080 a year), you'll keep an extra $104 in your pocket by zipping up your parka, getting out of the car and lifting that nozzle and filling the tank yourself.

39. Skip the car wash.
Break out a bucket and rags and give the minivan a scrub down yourself and save $10 a month, or $120 a year.

40. Save big on car insurance.
Increase your deductible from $250 to $500, bundle your auto and home insurance with one insurance company, drop collision and/or comprehensive insurance (only on much older vehicles) and check to see if you are eligible for discounts for low-mileage, airbags, antitheft devices, etc. You could save as much as 35 per cent ($450) on a $1,500 policy.

TOTAL SAVINGS: $15,659
__________________
Kimberley

"there is nothing to worry about, just plenty to think about" from an episode of Extreme Makeover House edition

check out my blog:
http://mommysavers.com/boards/journa...owjournal&j=21
Kimberley is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2006, 11:01 PM   #2
Default  
ShannonJoseph
Senior Mommysavers Member
 
ShannonJoseph's Avatar
 
Last Online: 10-26-2008 07:06 PM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 125
iTrader: (0)
it's funny to read this because i'm amazed at some of the things people do.
some of the things,
buy coffee every morning? buy stuff to eat at the theater? spend a week in a hotel? just little things like that are things we never do.
__________________
pregnancy calendar
ShannonJoseph is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2006, 11:19 PM   #3
Default  
melissae
Senior Mommysavers Member
 
melissae's Avatar
 
Last Online: 04-26-2008 10:12 AM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: KS
Posts: 236
iTrader: (0)
Great reminder!!! I read this not that long ago but sometimes you need a gentle reminder to keep up your efforts to save money.
melissae is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2006, 11:24 PM   #4
Default  
JeannetteDavis
Mommysavers Addict
 
JeannetteDavis's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Midwest
Real Name: Jeannette
Posts: 6,114
iTrader: (0)
Funny how quickly things add up. Of course, some of the things mentioned are extremely frivolous and can certainly be chopped out of a budget. I just couldn't live in my area with rabbit ears, though! I'd go stark-raving looney!!!!
__________________
JeannetteDavis is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2006, 11:27 PM   #5
Default  
melissae
Senior Mommysavers Member
 
melissae's Avatar
 
Last Online: 04-26-2008 10:12 AM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: KS
Posts: 236
iTrader: (0)
Quote:
Originally Posted by [b
Quote[/b] (JeannetteDavis @ July 10 2006,23:24)]Funny how quickly things add up. *Of course, some of the things mentioned are extremely frivolous and can certainly be chopped out of a budget. *I just couldn't live in my area with rabbit ears, though! *I'd go stark-raving looney!!!!
i recently did it and i thought i would freak out too. But amazingly i am adjusted to it now and i actually get stuff done around the house
melissae is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2006, 11:30 PM   #6
Default  
JeannetteDavis
Mommysavers Addict
 
JeannetteDavis's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Midwest
Real Name: Jeannette
Posts: 6,114
iTrader: (0)
Quote:
Originally Posted by [b
Quote[/b] (melissae @ July 10 2006,23:27)]
Quote:
Originally Posted by [b
Quote[/b] (JeannetteDavis @ July 10 2006,23:24)]Funny how quickly things add up. *Of course, some of the things mentioned are extremely frivolous and can certainly be chopped out of a budget. *I just couldn't live in my area with rabbit ears, though! *I'd go stark-raving looney!!!!
i recently did it and i thought i would freak out too. But amazingly i am adjusted to it now and i actually get stuff done around the house
I bow down to you! We would have only 1 channel if it weren't for cable. I could do it if I HAD to, but I really don't want to think about it at this point in my life.
__________________
JeannetteDavis is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-10-2006, 11:35 PM   #7
Default  
melissae
Senior Mommysavers Member
 
melissae's Avatar
 
Last Online: 04-26-2008 10:12 AM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: KS
Posts: 236
iTrader: (0)
Quote:
Originally Posted by [b
Quote[/b] (JeannetteDavis @ July 10 2006,23:30)]
Quote:
Originally Posted by [b
Quote[/b] (melissae @ July 10 2006,23:27)]
Quote:
Originally Posted by [b
Quote[/b] (JeannetteDavis @ July 10 2006,23:24)]Funny how quickly things add up. *Of course, some of the things mentioned are extremely frivolous and can certainly be chopped out of a budget. *I just couldn't live in my area with rabbit ears, though! *I'd go stark-raving looney!!!!
i recently did it and i thought i would freak out too. But amazingly i am adjusted to it now and i actually get stuff done around the house
I bow down to you! *We would have only 1 channel if it weren't for cable. *I could do it if I HAD to, but I really don't want to think about it at this point in my life.
Thank you...i have yet to get rabbit ears so its dvds for now. LOL
I am hoping after we get them we get at least 2-3 basic stations.
melissae is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2006, 01:38 AM   #8
Default  
allgirls
Welcome Wagon Goddess & Approved Trader
 
allgirls's Avatar
 
Last Online: Yesterday 10:30 PM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 6,346
iTrader: (11)
Latest Blog Entry: On the mend
Blog Entries: 16
I already do most of them and am still looking for ways to save.

I do have a problem with number two. first you will lose positive credit history by constantly switching. I kept one card with higher rate but never used it unless I new I could pay it off within one month. I only have 2 card currently and one has a balance of zero.

allgirls
__________________
allgirls, mom to 3 girls
allgirls is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2006, 10:00 AM   #9
Smile  
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Latest Blog Entry: What a productive weekend!
I live without cable or antennea! Yes! Not neccesarily by choice but I do it and it's not hard. We buy DVDs for $5 or less when we can and we watch them. Most of the time I'm watching kids shows on cable/satellite any way. I live in a rural area and the only TV choice is satellite. If you don't have A+ credit, you have to pay $300 for the equipment. I don't have $300 so I get by on DVDs and VHS tapes. Also, I would love to have one of those BIG antenneas but can't afford that now, either. If I had one of those, I could actually get 5 stations. My sons TV gets them with rabbit ears but we never watch it.
  Reply With Quote
Old 07-11-2006, 10:53 AM   #10
Default  
anniebananie
Mommysavers Diva
 
anniebananie's Avatar
 
Last Online: 11-17-2009 08:38 AM
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Central Virginia
Posts: 547
iTrader: (0)
Quote:
Originally Posted by [b
Quote[/b] ]19. Be your own brewmaster.
Wine kits at do-it-yourself stores make it easy to bottle your own Barolo. It costs about $100 for 30 bottles of wine, or just over $3 a bottle. If you normally buy five bottles of wine a month at $10 each, you'll save $400 a year. If you're a beer drinker who goes through six cases of 24s a year, it would cost about $210. Make your own and you'll pay only $130, a savings of $80 a year. Total savings for alcohol: $480.
We've just started doing this, and the cost is spot on. (The wine is pretty good too!) And, if you reuse your bottles and get them from friends and family, it costs even less. Now, the start up costs are a few hundred dollars for the equipment, but if you amoritize it over it's life, it's a really good investment!
__________________
check out my blog: http://anniebananie.wordpress.com
anniebananie is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Members






Sponsors

Mommysavers Channel

Advertisement

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:04 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0