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99p

(55 Posts)
watermeadow Thu 26-Mar-26 06:47:26

Apparently prices end in 99 because people see £2.99 as cheaper than £3. I can’t believe people are that stupid when 1p is about as valuable as a farthing.
I automatically round up every price to whole pounds and find all those 99s infuriating. It’s high time we abolished those virtually worthless coins like coppers, 5s and 10s.
I suppose it’s old people who would want to keep them, do you?

BlueBelle Thu 26-Mar-26 16:28:34

I always tell them to put them in the charity box on the counter
Seems logical to me

Beechnut Thu 26-Mar-26 16:12:08

A local Tesco to me still has one of those HelterSkelter. I used it recently and took my voucher to customer services and they gave me cash.

HelterSkelter1 Thu 26-Mar-26 11:04:08

Tesco had one of the coin changing machines, but you got a voucher to use there not pound coins back. I am not even sure they still have the machine anymore I must check.

Allira Thu 26-Mar-26 11:02:25

I don't mind the 10p at all but the "coppers" and 5p are annoying. I am reluctant even to put them in the charity box often found on the shop counter as they must be a pain to count and then find a bank to pay them in.
HelterSkelter I have a money box full of 1p, 2p and 5p coins.

When the DGC were younger, sometimes other Granny and I took them to the seaside for the day and they liked to use them in the slot machines on the pier. Teaching them bad habits blush but it was fun!

midgey Thu 26-Mar-26 11:01:43

I always round up in my head, as in £4. 50 to £5, so am pleasantly surprised to find I have a little money left, my daughters round down and are frequently astonished to find they have less!

Allira Thu 26-Mar-26 10:58:10

Grandmabatty

You are making a whole lot of assumptions here about the intelligence of older people.

Yes, it's ageism - on a site for older people.

Older people have coped with the transition from £sd to decimal currency.
We remember when prices would be 19s 11d instead of £1.
We're not easily as fooled as you may think, watermeadow. Many of us can do mental arithmetic too, having been drilled in it at primary school.

What puzzles me, though, is the price of fuel. If I put just one litre of fuel into my car, how could the garage charge me 147.2p or 139.9p? Just why?

Cossy Thu 26-Mar-26 10:54:04

Doesn’t bother me either way!

We always used to save coppers, we used the 2p for the arcade’s with our grandson!

Now we have coppers in a big plastic pot and I keep meaning to take it and put it through one of those machines in the supermarkets which change loose change into notes or £1 coins

Charleygirl5 Thu 26-Mar-26 10:47:23

I do not seem to use cash at all these days and doing online banking I can easily keep track of spending.

watermeadow Thu 26-Mar-26 09:54:03

I am old and find older people tend to cling to what’s familiar, I didn’t mean old people are stupider than others.

Graphite Thu 26-Mar-26 09:39:36

people see £2.99 as cheaper than £3

But it is cheaper. One penny cheaper.

Nobody is fooled. It's just psychology. Applies to clothes, sofas, cars, anything we might buy.

I do the 1p savings challenge each year.

It works like this. Save 1p on day 1. Save 2p on day 2. Save 3p on day 3 ... and so on throughout the year.

By the end of the year, I have saved £667.95.

I started doing this when I did use cash, putting the coppers in an old pasta jar. I no long do. I just transfer the month's savings equivalent into a separate bank account.

Some people just do it for part of the year, stopping by say end of October (£463.60) and using the money for Christmas shopping.

TheWeirdoAgain60 Thu 26-Mar-26 09:36:12

I love the copper and 99p things as I drop them in the animal charity collection boxes along with other bits of change in the shops.

MT62 Thu 26-Mar-26 09:28:14

I still use cash, well half & half. I use my spare change to buy a book off the charity stand on my way out of the supermarket.
I have a small jar of loose change, which I put a couple of quid under my saucer for my local coffee house.

Whingey Thu 26-Mar-26 09:27:52

I like 2p coins for amusement arcade.

HelterSkelter1 Thu 26-Mar-26 09:23:05

I also try and have £1 or 50p coins in my pocket as the Scouts often pack shopping in my supermarket at the weekend. Otherwise I mostly pay by card.

NotSpaghetti Thu 26-Mar-26 08:54:23

This is a little on the patronising side too I feel...
But there again, assuming you’re a younger person you wouldn’t understand psychology.

Maggiemaybe Thu 26-Mar-26 08:52:55

I hardly ever use cash these days either, so can’t remember the last time I got or used any coppers. DH picked up a Betty’s Jar at Whitby RNLI - they’re tiny jam pots that you pop any 5p coins in - and we still haven’t filled it two years later, despite him valiantly shaking it at every visitor as they leave the house grin. The Betty’s scheme has raised over £350,000 in eight years though, so it shows that there is still a use for the spare change.

My dad used to call it shrapnel.

M0nica Thu 26-Mar-26 08:47:21

kittylester

I understood that the reason for prices being just below around number was so that they had to be put through the till to allow the till drawer to open and change taken out.

Round amounts could just be pocketed by unscrupulous shop assistants.

Yes, this is what I have always understood.

I have heard the other explanation, but it had nothing to do with old people falling for it but the main body of the population falling for it.

I suspect that both are true, because I have noticed that in £shops and sales, 0.99 prices will be used, with the £ amount in a huge font with the 99p element in a tiny font, so that at a glance you only notice the £s, only when you stop and look do you see the 99p

Witzend Thu 26-Mar-26 08:21:09

Must say I often appreciate the 99p Kindle reads that are frequently offered to me by Amazon.
No stray pennies to bother about, either. I hardly ever pay cash for anything anyway, though having said that, I will need to buy a handful of £1 coins from the Bocketts Farm shop on Sunday (taking the Gdcs) since they all love the coin operated diggers.

HelterSkelter1 Thu 26-Mar-26 08:19:20

I don't mind the 10p at all but the "coppers" and 5p are annoying. I am reluctant even to put them in the charity box often found on the shop counter as they must be a pain to count and then find a bank to pay them in.
I feel sorry for small children who like mine loved playing with a till and counting out the money. Good counting practice and use of fingers. I expect young children have no idea what the coins mean, like my children viewed a 3 penny bit or old penny.
I round up in my mind anyway as am too busy working out which is a better buy between a special offer and a large size.
I expect OP counts herself in with the oldies as I reluctantly do now especially after catching myself in a shop mirrorn this week. OMG who was that!,

GrannyGravy13 Thu 26-Mar-26 08:10:33

kittylester 👍

Maggiemaybe Thu 26-Mar-26 07:39:36

petra

^i suppose it’s old people who want to keep them^
Putting aside your snidy comment, it’s psychological. But there again, assuming you’re a younger person you wouldn’t understand psychology.
This might, just might help you to understand.

www.rd.com/article/why-prices-end-in-99/#

Unless we have a brand new watermeadow, she’s a long standing member and the same age bracket as most of us.

ViceVersa Thu 26-Mar-26 07:35:39

kittylester

I understood that the reason for prices being just below around number was so that they had to be put through the till to allow the till drawer to open and change taken out.

Round amounts could just be pocketed by unscrupulous shop assistants.

That was what I was always led to believe too - although I suppose it could be argued that is becoming redundant too now as fewer and fewer people actually pay for things in cash.

Astitchintime Thu 26-Mar-26 07:29:14

kittylester

I understood that the reason for prices being just below around number was so that they had to be put through the till to allow the till drawer to open and change taken out.

Round amounts could just be pocketed by unscrupulous shop assistants.

Correct!
My late uncle was a shop keeper and this was his explanation when I once questioned items being priced in other than whole pounds.

Flippinheck Thu 26-Mar-26 07:28:02

You win today’s prize for the most patronising comment.

kittylester Thu 26-Mar-26 07:22:46

I understood that the reason for prices being just below around number was so that they had to be put through the till to allow the till drawer to open and change taken out.

Round amounts could just be pocketed by unscrupulous shop assistants.