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Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeCoolchinchilla Feedback About This Post:RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeYou can put up a clothes line in your garage or attic during the winter to save on dryer electricity, it will take longer but the savings will be worth it. Post By anne (Guest Post) RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal Life
I shop at a discount food store for myself and my 17 yo son. I don't buy new clothes, I just decided to lose weight so I could fit into all those clothes that have been sitting in my cupboard for years. I stopped buying expensive moisturiser for my face and leave in products for my hair. I buy coconut oil instead and my hair and skin are better than they've ever been. Post by Killer Bees RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal Life
I haven'at really done this -- tallying up -- but since I've been going to the thrift store, garage sales etc. I can figure out what it would have cost me to buy new ....would I have bought it new at the store, no but when when a name brand shirt that looks great is 50cents, you buy it if you need it or not. Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeI started tracking how much I saved from coupons and rebates only since 1999-to date (7/17/06) I have save almost $23,000! -- and that is just for me and my hubby (and pets-dog, cat,and 2 birds) He used to laugh at my efforts--not anymore! Plus I recycle, re-use, re-invent anything possible, make my own soap, jewelry, greeting cards, garden stones and candles--it's so worth it! and so much fun! !-xxxJuls Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeI just bought a whole comforter set for my bed at a "junk" store. It was brand new and some pieces were still in the package. I paid $15 for it (comforter, sheets, shams, decorative pillow, bed ruffle, valances) I went on their website and found out that it's worth over $300! WOW! Post by scruggle RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeI save on my husbands breakfast and lunch by packing it myself. I make homemade pancakes, breakfast burritos,muffins and french toast that I pack for his breakfast and then pack his lunch with homemade meat spead, chicken salad or tuna, along with homemade cookies or muffins, or homemade pudding or fruit cups. He also has to have his cokes, if he was buying them at the convience store it was adding up to about $3.00 per day, for a 30 day month it adds up to about $90.00 thats alot just for coke. So I went to Krogers one day and got their 2 liter cola for 55 cents and had him try it, he liked it so I went back and go 30 of the 2 liter cokes for $16.50 and put them as needed in the refrig. He takes one every day and get about 3 1/2 20oz bottles out of it, he reuses a 20 oz coke bottle during his work day. So that a savings of $73.50, quite a savings wouldn't you agree? We also don't use credit cards unless we have to for emergency. We are looking into a cheaper phone service and we are cutting out cable tv down to extented basic, we all watch to much tv anyway, and its pretty painless. We also write down every penny we spend so we know where our money goes. I hope this is helpful to someone. Post by Mysticdream44 RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeMy winter electricity bill went up about $45 from the summer. The only real difference I can come up with is that in the summer I dry virtually all my clothes outside and in the winter I have to use my electric dryer. Our electricity rates are a little over 10c a kwh (high). I dry 1-2 loads a day, so each load costs me about a dollar to dry!! I can't wait for warmer weather so I can reap the savings again by hanging my clothes to dry. Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeI don't merely "save" money by being frugal - I am able to survive under nearly impossible financial conditions. In the last year, my income has dropped by $15,000 / year, and my expenses (due to a new baby) have risen by over $7,000 / year. I don't qualify for public assistance, nor do I get child support (I'm a single mom). All the pennies I save add up and somehow, someway, I make ends meet every month. It's not easy (to give you an example: I have to feed myself and my 6 month old daughter on $15 / week) but at least I'm making it! Post by Leann2 RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeI save most of my money on groceries..I shop at a discount grocery store where all they sell is their own brands...I save about 60%.. I have a family of 5, with a yearly income of $25,000 a year which isn't much... but i manage to spend $50-$60 a week at this store Where when i would shop at a Super Walmart i would spen$130.00 a week (give or take a few $) And also i don't buy new clothing, i buy used clothing in great condition or i might get involved in a clothing swap.. But that is how i save money..here is the website for the store i shop at to see if their is one in your area www.aldi.com Post by HopeRomine RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal Life
I know just how you feel! I found this yesterday and intend to post where I can see it every day. Post By mildred lane (Guest Post) RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeI used to tally my coupon savings. One year I saved about $500 just from cutting and using coupons and that is just for a family of two! Post by toni k. RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeHere's what I found out. I was never frugal, in fact a spendthrift and never saved a cent until about 2 years ago. Have always made a good wage, too. Now I have $8000 in the bank, a bunch of U.S. Savings Bonds, and a nice IRA account started with a few thousand in that. My life is more peaceful, too. I'm just not buying all my lunches out, catalog shopping because the stuff is cute, clothes I don't wear or need, tons of makeup, treating friends all the time to drinks and dinner, stopped smoking and feel SO much better, don't overeat or waste food, when it came time to buy another vehicle it wasn't fancy and fast but is dependable, just stuff like that. It pays, it really does! Post by Jayne RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal LifeIf the visual impact will help you to continue your frugality program, here's what I would suggest: get a jar, coffee can, whatever. If you save .12 by buying a generic instead of a name brand item, put that .12 in the jar. If you serve popsicles at home instead of giving the kids money for the Good Humor truck and that saved you $2, put the $2 in the jar. If you cancel a magazine subscription and read them at the library instead, and that saved you $10, put the $10 in the jar. Get the picture? Pick a specific amount of time -- a week, a month -- and don't look until that time is up. I bet you will be pleasantly surprised at how much is in the jar! Post By Becki in Indiana (Guest Post) RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal Life
I save by budgeting according to our income. We are a family of four with two teens living on about $32K a year. We actually need about $36K a year and that gets met with tax refunds and such. I can tell you that I save by shopping for car insurance, not using credit cards for anything, and other things. How I determine how much we save is by seeing to it that we don't need to work more to pay for more stuff. Bottom line: I'm saving my family $10K to $18K a year by all of us agreeing to live simply - because that's much I would make if I had a paying job. And the kids and husband want me at home where I want to be. Post by rabbithorns RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal Life
well, in my family, with our budget, even if we save only a few dollars a month, that is STILL saving! Post By Ann (Guest Post) RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal Life
Home Post by ThriftyFun RE: Adding Up the Savings from a Frugal Life
The fluoro bulb and dryer cost savings can be found on power companies websites - if a dryer costs x number of $ per hour to run and you use your's for 5 hours per week that's how much you've saved if you line dry. On our group, (FrugalAussies), we have a couple of ladies who are brilliant at adding up their savings. Just start small - with the little things you've done - e.g. using a generic brand of breakfast cereal, and multiply by how many packs you use a week/month/year. Jot these down in a note book and watch them add up. Your own savings will be much more meaningful to you than someone elses. Also, one of our group set us a $1 a day challenge. If you save 10c, 20c, 30c, etc. by buying cheaper, or making do with something you already have rather than buying something, add up your savings and try to make at least $1 every day = $365+ a year with very little effort. The other motivational thing you can do is actually save that cash in a jar and watch it mount up - put it towards your credit card bill, your mortgage or use some of it to treat yourself. Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) |
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