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Legal, pensions and money

Trying to save money this year - any clever tips?

(59 Posts)
granoffour Wed 08-Jan-20 14:18:21

My youngest granddaughter got engaged over New Year. grin! We are over the moon for her of course - she and I are very close. The wedding is likely to be in Italy next year. We've had a rather expensive end of 2019 with car expenses, new boiler etc and would like to save some pennies this year so we can extend our stay in Italy and have a lovely holiday. Any clever tips from frugal gransnetters? I've signed up to moneysavingexpert and at some point in Jan will start looking at our insurances etc. Anyone doing a no-spend Jan?

annsixty Sat 11-Jan-20 08:28:54

This is just a suggestion, more a saving idea.
When you get your two months , Feb and March, of not paying council tax ( if you pay monthly by DD), put that money immediately into your savings account.
If left in your current account it will just get spent.
Also echo Monica by doing the same when the 13th pension payment is paid.

GreenGran78 Sat 11-Jan-20 05:39:43

Theresacoo where do you find your competitions? I used to average a prize every few weeks in the days of lots of supermarket competitions. I used to love writing slogans, and there was no internet, so questions had to be researched. Most of the ones these days are online prize draws, which must receive thousands of entries.

Hetty58 Fri 10-Jan-20 22:37:50

Avoid shops, food shop online with a list, no impulse buys - and go vegetarian or vegan if you can. Bake your own treats/biccies/cakes, just buy ingredients, nicer and cheaper.

Leave one or two extra days between food shops (so if you shop weekly, make it eight or nine days instead). Gradually add more days. Limit local shopping strictly to bread, fruit and vegetables. You'll save a fortune!

Notthecatsmother Fri 10-Jan-20 22:20:03

moneysavingexpert.com and the forums on there have loads of money saving ideas. Worth a look.

Chardy Fri 10-Jan-20 22:13:44

Dare I say eat less meat?

Tanjamaltija Fri 10-Jan-20 19:31:43

Eat fruits and vegetables in season, and cook from scratch.
Shop for clothes and books in charity shops.
Learn how to mend / alter / repurpose stuff.
Take the bus in stead of driving, when you can.
Use cash so you can see the amount dwindle, rather than cards.
Use Facebook Messenger to call people, rather than your phone(s).

Esspee Fri 10-Jan-20 19:09:07

Watched an interesting programme some time ago where either Lidl or Aldi products were blind taste tested by some upper class twits who were amazed at the quality.
I do my main shop at Lidl and am always surprised at how little I spend these days so that is a great way to save.
Changing your insurances, energy suppliers etc can also save hundreds.
Have a wonderful time.

Annie26 Fri 10-Jan-20 19:01:23

I saved towards Christmas last year by putting away 1p on Jan 1st, 2p on Jan 2nd etc. As the year progresssed I tended to round the daily figure up and by December had £550 saved. I am doing similar this year but am intending to put £50 away a month. I think it may have been a Martin Lewis tip at the beginning of 2019 to do this.

Juliet27 Fri 10-Jan-20 16:27:45

Don’t look for sales, especially not online....it can waste so much time, not to mention money!

Juliet27 Fri 10-Jan-20 16:25:38

Woodmouse. Ditto. They’re useful accounts aren’t they!

Newatthis Fri 10-Jan-20 16:18:21

How about trying to sell some of your unwanted items. There are lots of sites Ebay etc. You may not make much but you could make enough for hotel accommodation/meals out etc - every little helps!

madmum38 Fri 10-Jan-20 15:41:46

Have you tried the TooGoodToGo app? It is food that may have been ordered too much or not sold as many as thought, some lovely restaurant food. All really good and the supermarket food isn’t on date or anything like that.
Got 4 beautiful buns last week from a bakery that does lactose intolerance food. You do pay but such a small amount compared with the normal cost.

newnanny Fri 10-Jan-20 14:11:31

We used to pay for internet and phone with Orange which became part of BT, then separately a Sky entertainment package for TV including sports and movies and an additional BT sport add on which together came to £170 per month then we changed and had it all through Virgin Media on offer for £90 per month for 18 months and then it reverts to £120 and get exactly the same plus we get unlimited data and minutes on a mobile phone which is a bonus as saves our son £35 per month only downside we no longer get Sky Atlantic but have saved £80 per month on package and now get unbelievably fast internet and because we did it through Topcashback we got £90 cash back too. I just wish we had looked into it sooner.

Madmaggie Fri 10-Jan-20 14:09:18

Have a look in your wardrobe to see if you already own a suitable outfit to avoid buying a new one. Perhaps a good friend would lend you accessories. Use google to find out what the weather will likely be. Borrow suitcases if necessary. Be aware of baggage restrictions to avoid paying overweight charges.

M0nica Fri 10-Jan-20 13:55:34

One I do so automaically I do not ven think about it.

State Pension is paid every 4 weeks, which is 13 payments a year, but I plan my finances as if it was paid every month. That means once a year I am paid twice in one month and, within my system, that is a bonus sum that can be allocated on anything I wish from a short holiday to, what I actually do, is set it aside to pay for Christmas.

grandtanteJE65 Fri 10-Jan-20 13:06:55

Compare prices. Even if you shop in the cheaper supermarkets you will find that certain items are cheaper in the one than in the other.

Use LED light bulbs everywhere in you house, but do still turn lights off in rooms where no-one is sitting.

If you drive a car, consider whether you could save money by walking shorter distances to shop.

You can save on water rates and electricity by using the shortest programme you washing-machine has.

MerylStreep Fri 10-Jan-20 12:56:09

If your an Amazon shopper take your card off.
That means that every time you are tempted to buy now you have to go through the fluff of putting it back on again.

Flakesdayout Fri 10-Jan-20 12:38:34

I have been off work for some months and am now being paid SSP which isnt alot. So I went through all of my direct debits and then started ringing around the utility companies. I got a reduction on Virgin, Mobile phone and Water. I found a direct debit being paid out that I didnt need. I shop in Aldi most of the time and if I do go shopping I ask myself if I want it, or need it. Usually I end up putting it back. I try to combine car journeys so that I do all my 'chores' in one trip.
When I was working I didnt worry about what I was spending and if nothing else, this has taught me that at times I was quite wasteful and bought things I did not need.
I also try not to put the heating on all the time during the day and layer up my clothes.
All of these little things do add up.
Have a lovely time at the wedding.

NotSpaghetti Fri 10-Jan-20 12:06:23

I don't know where the wedding will be but Italy is like the UK in reverse. Cheaper in the south!

Cambia Fri 10-Jan-20 11:31:48

Try to have 15 days a month when you don’t spend (food excluded). Use cash for food buys and card for anything else so you can budget carefully. Cash definitely lakes you think more carefully about spending.
We are doing a yearly cash challenge this year. Get a box/container and on Jan 1st put a penny in, 2nd Jan two pence, right round the year until you are putting £3.65 in on the last day of the year. Open it up next Jan and you should have around £700! We have varied this a bit by writing the days on the box and throwing change in and crossing off the relevant day for the amount of change..

JackyB Fri 10-Jan-20 10:44:24

Read the small print.

For example: Sometimes special offers only apply if you order a minimum amount and you end up buying something just to hoik the order value over that amount. Cheaper not to buy it at all and to do without the special discount.

rowanflower0 Fri 10-Jan-20 10:42:12

If you find you are saving - bu using Aldi, Topcashback, cheaper fuel, etc; find a bank to open a savings account like mine at Natwest - if I save at least £50 in a month, as well as adding monthly interest you get a bonus interest rate - quite a difference!
Also suggest you look around , de-clutter and sell any surplus items on ebay, someone always wants what you don't!

Lilyflower Fri 10-Jan-20 10:40:24

Free pleasures:- walking, reading, listening to the radio and watching (good quality) TV, cooking & baking, using the library, making your household & garden chores your fitness regime (cancel gym fees), watch Freeview instead of subscription TV.

Cheap pleasures:- buying from charity shops instead of new, eBaying unwanted items, swapping instead of buying, putting unwanted items on Freecycle and contributing your own unwanted items to same, yellow sticker hunting for discounted food, downshifting brands you buy to save cash, haggling online for cheaper phone, TV, insurance and utility bills, share a Netflix and Amazon Prime account with someone else.

GillT57 Fri 10-Jan-20 10:28:16

All of the above are very useful suggestions, the one I would recommend is getting rid of Sky. They are prone to putting your subscription up by just a couple of pounds at a time and then before you know where you are the price bears no resemblance to what you signed up for. We cancelled it. The first year we then got half price as an incentive to lure us to stay but I still cancelled a year later and bought a Freesat box. There is no monthly fee, and we bought the box for about the cost of 3-6 months Sky subs. Still have it four years later so a great amount of money saved there. I would also seriously consider not renewing your pet insurance as long as you would be able to pay should there be an emergency. We 'self insure' and have saved thousands over the years of pet ownership. When we have had a couple of hefty bills, we paid them and it was still far less than the annual insurance policy, especially when you take off all the exclusions. When you are in Italy, why not look at an AirBnB? Cheaper than a hotel, gives you the freedom to eat and drink what you like, when you like, and you can go out to eat in the evening where you wish.

25Avalon Fri 10-Jan-20 10:22:56

Cook from scratch.
Look for the reduced section at your local supermarket. The best time for this is usually an hour before they close.
Freeze anything you don't use.
Grow your own vegetables. For e.g. even in a small space or a plastic trough you can grow cut and come again salad lettuce for the price of a packet of seeds, Much cheaper and healthier.
Don't buy expensive cleaning mateials. If you have a steam cleaner use that to clean the cooker hob. A microfibre cloth will clean paintwork and windows with plain water. Buff up windows with newspaper.
Walk rather than take the car if you can. This is better for the environment and your health.
Turn the central heating thermostat down and wear thicker layers of clothes. An electric blanket is cheaper to run so turn the ch off all night.
If you have a mobile phone put it on pay as you go sim only and only use it for emergencies. Let people ring you.
Avoid cake shops, cafes and other temptations.
Don't throw old clothes away. Cut them up and recycle them as dusters and cleaning cloths rather than using expensive paper disposables.
Only boil as much water in the kettle as you need.
Cook more vegetables together in one saucepan. If you have a steamer cook potatoes in the bottom and steam other vegetables on top. Then you only use one ring.
Try to cook your main meal and dessert in the oven at the same time by finding dishes with compatible heat requirements.