Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Cost of living

Stretching your budget? Share tips and advice to discuss budgeting and energy saving here. For the latest deals and discounts, sign up for Mumsnet Moneysaver emails.

Amble into April Frugaleering

990 replies

Unescorted · 17/04/2022 08:15

Follow on from the old thread

This is a space / long running thread for people wanting tips on making life cheaper for what ever reason and support who have to make living less expensive. If you are new here just post away everyone is welcome.

Frugal tips from the hive mind so far....

Check your outgoing-are they essential, are you on the best deal
Loyalty cards for stores you regularly shop at
Meal plan
Annual budget rather than monthly for those, well annual, expenses
Second hand is fine for 90% of stuff
Sign up to money saving expert emails
Insulation at home.
Close curtains at dark and tuck behind rads
Foil behind external wall rad
Turn the heating down . Tropical houses are not necessary
Use the washing line when you can
Look out for food recycling scheme- bread and butter thing, company shop, too good to go type things
Do you have to buy that Christmas/ birthday present. Can you give time instead
Eat less meat (tho I’m rubbish at this)
Have a on toast day. Or baked potato weekly
Double up while the oven is on for a reheat meal or a bake. Save electric running the oven less.
Branded goods are not always the best
-Walk those short trips if possible, instead of using the car (I am the worst for doing this). Saves petrol, good exercise too.
-Combine car trips better too eg dropped DD off at an activity tonight, which is next to the supermarket.
Cancel sky, if you still want the programmes switch to Now Tv for a fraction of the price
Cancel any subscriptions you don't need. Check direct debits to make sure you're not paying for anything you no longer need by accident
Check all your bills, insurances etc are the cheapest you can get for the cover you need (the last bit is important)
If you can get a voucher, use a cash back site or have some sort of work discount (nhs, bluelight, Tesco, student etc) check before paying
Meal plan before you shop. Make extra to freeze for another day as it's often cheaper per kg to buy bigger packs of meat
Go veggie a couple of times a week
Aldi and Lidl are great but not if you're going to get sidetracked by the aisle of doom
An annual budget is essential but pay yourself first each month so money into the annual pot, into savings, off debt before anything else happens. Make sure there's a line in your budget for fun money even if it's a tiny amount, budgeting can be a grind otherwise
You will have patches of spendiness and demotivation, don't give up just start again from wherever you end up
Take your own drinks, snacks, food, picnic - Invariably cheaper and nicer
Make your own if you have a stocked baking cupboard and spice cupboard. Cheaper and nicer, tho building said cupboard can be ££ (costs can be reduced by a visit to your local international supermarket)
Aldi for baking stuff it’s fine.
Work out of season for clothes as it’s usually cheaper
i switched to a coffee subscription (coffee is my weakness) - so our local shop delivers me a 250g bag of ground coffee every 2 weeks (i have 4 in the cupboard currently) and i make my own morning coffee. the subscription is for 6 months and costs me £58 i think. a takeaway from the same shop is £2.80 a pop. so it is a money saver. I bought a Contigo cup (spendy but worth every penny). so take my coffee hot to work with me.

I'm also a fan of using it up. so tings like toiletries, stationary (i am also a notebook hoarder) food etc. not replacing until it's all gone (or all of one thing gone).

my Lloyds account does "save the change" so it rounds up a purchase and then moves the pence to my savings account.

I also pay myself first on payday and am trying to use the things we have- zoo membership - use it loads so worth the £160 a year cost. same with my gym membership i use it so get my moneys worth.

Also what you can save/be frugal on can be inversely related to your means. If you have more "spare" money per month it's easier to buy in bulk and choose things that are cheapest per kg. If you have less or no spare money this isn't possible to do and then you're looking at cheapest price per item rather than per kg.

Agree re taking own stuff although I do often forget but a good coffee cup and water bottle is a good investment if you can afford it

If you have a dog use something like all about dog food to work out what the best food is you can buy based on what you can afford to spend per day
I also give the clothes an extra spin in the washing machine before they go in the dryer, and dry outside whenever i can - currently not living at home, so limited to a washer dryer (which is crap) and an airer next to a rad which i hate.

im a big fan of using the freezer and freeze anything i can. we buy reduced items (like bread and keep it in the freezer as it saves it going off - we maybe get through a loaf every couple of weeks).
I know that credit cards are sometimes seen here as the work of the devil (on MN specifically not this thread) but if you have one use to to your advantage. Mine gives me money back in the form of M&S or amazon vouchers every quarter depending on how much I've spent. and as long as you pay it off every month it works.
Top Cashback for all internet purchases.
Join the library - many have free access to Audible, Libby (for magazines and newspapers) as well as having an amazing selection of books.
Consider how you cook things - residual heat cooking works really well for rice and any slow cooker recipe.
Grow herbs and salad leaves on a window sill
Grow soft fruit - your local allotment / neighbours with a raspberry cane/ strawberry / current / gooseberry will be more than happy to give you a cutting.
Look for local food pantries
If you need credit use a Credit Union. If you are saving support your local credit union by becoming one of their savers.

Useful websites
Money Saving Expert especially the 90 ways to survive the cost of living crisis

Independent Foodbank Network There are some things that I wish we did not need

CAB

step change

cooking on a bootstrap

Thrifty Lesley

OP posts:
Thread gallery
23
HumbugWhale · 12/05/2022 20:17

I am so behind with the thread! Need to catch up.

Had a frugal day returning a couple of things I bought to the shops for a refund and eating random things I had previously made and frozen for both lunch and dinner!

WreckTangled · 12/05/2022 20:22

I actually had a nsd.

lifelongfrugaleer · 13/05/2022 06:22

It’s saved for and planned and you did it in the most frugal way em. Win win ino
nsd yesterday but need a big shop this weekend. Been putting off and living from cupboards but need to buy the bullet.
165 here last time I filled up a couple
of weeks ago. Both our cars are petrol

WreckTangled · 13/05/2022 06:28

I need to do the big shop today after work. Dreading it. Going to aldi again. Also need more fuel 😭

WreckTangled · 13/05/2022 07:18

It's been a long five years! Also we're over paying the loan so will have paid off the July payment by the beginning of June meaning the end of June payment will be the final one.

Amble into April Frugaleering
Gensola · 13/05/2022 07:58

wreck that’s amazing, well done!! I am so looking forward to this day - I have 24 months left on my personal loan (IVF).

WreckTangled · 13/05/2022 08:01

Thanks! It was due to mature in November but after Christmas we decided to stop saving into the LISA and just clear the loan. We would have been debt free then but dh went self employed in March and we had to borrow to set that up. Bit of a pain but it'll be worth it in the end.

ememem84 · 13/05/2022 08:39

wreck good job!!!!

lazy day here. The dc are sleeping over at dparents tomorrow so we’re going to pack up their things today and take them round. We are at a wedding tomorrow so dparents will pick them up from the venue.

Timetoswitch · 13/05/2022 09:29

Great news wreck 👍

Had a call from the care home at 3.45am, Dad had severe unusual coloured vomit and I had to give permission for him to go to hospital. Haven’t been able to get an update from the hospital yet as he is still in A&E and they are not answering (as understandably incredibly busy)

Ran out of normal tea bags this morning. Decaf is not cutting it right now!

lifelongfrugaleer · 13/05/2022 10:09

Great news wreck
oh no time, hope you get an update soon

Twilight7777 · 13/05/2022 14:35

As a lurker I’ve been following and reading through the thread but not participating. Until now…😊

I had a bed wetting problem until I was 12 as I wasn’t getting the cue to wake up in time. I’m not sure on the age or suitability of your child but just wondered would it be worth getting an alarm clock that vibrates when the bed is wet? As that worked for me, but obviously dependent on age and suitability of your child. Just my 2 cents ❤️

continues to lurk

Twilight7777 · 13/05/2022 14:36

Twilight7777 · 13/05/2022 14:35

As a lurker I’ve been following and reading through the thread but not participating. Until now…😊

I had a bed wetting problem until I was 12 as I wasn’t getting the cue to wake up in time. I’m not sure on the age or suitability of your child but just wondered would it be worth getting an alarm clock that vibrates when the bed is wet? As that worked for me, but obviously dependent on age and suitability of your child. Just my 2 cents ❤️

continues to lurk

That was to @Thoughtsarrivelikebutterflies5 apologies

Timetoswitch · 13/05/2022 14:44

From the hospital reception, Dad is likely still in A&E, but I can’t get through to speak to anyone. Care home spoke to the hospital a couple of hours ago, they are struggling to communicate with him (deaf & dementia) and still doing investigations.

Timetoswitch · 13/05/2022 14:46

£28 tesco

tea bags have been purchased 🤣

WreckTangled · 13/05/2022 14:49

Ok spends:

Aldi £79.40
Tesco £9.88
Car wash £6 lazy
Fuel and reduced low carb bread and lemon cake £50.22 so happy to spot the bread, it's my favourite and usually £1.90 but was down to 45p. This leaves us £14 of the budget to top up fruit or get anything I might have forgotten.

Meal plan for the week:

Pizza
Chilli and rice
Chicken nuggets and chips (not even sorry)
Macaroni cheese with salad
Pasta with chicken sausages
Brinner
And one night hoping dh will pay for us to go out for dinner

I tend to eat a variation of what everyone else is having or make myself something separate as low carb/trying to lose some weight.

Breakfasts are bagel thins with cream cheese, crepes, cereal, fruit
Lunches are cheese topped rolls with ham/pickle/cheese, cereal bar, frube, tomatoes and cucumber
After school is breadsticks, fruit, soreen

TheNewlmprovedMrsMadEvans · 13/05/2022 16:45

£24 Morrisons salad stuff , BBQ chicken drumsticks, pizzas & ice cream ready for this beautiful sunny weather we are promised this weekend lol
Fingers crossed Smile

Decafflatteplease · 13/05/2022 16:49

That sounds like a lovely meal plan @WreckTangled

£18 on prescription...I asked about that prepay thing but they said it would be more expensive than paying as and when

£15 present for a friend

£40 mix of present for another friend, nappies for DC, self care treat of magazine for me.

We are now overdrawn, standard. And still quite a few bills to come out. Plus normal spends.

We've also told the DC we can get a takeaway tomorrow as all DC are poorly plus myself and we haven't had a Chinese for ages. Probably shouldn't due to aforementioned overdraft though. We all share though and get 4 meals between 6 of us which tbh is plenty and they always pop something free in as we know the owners eg free prawn crackers, or soup, or spring rolls etc

Rough meal plan for next week, I do ocado on a Saturday so will have a better idea then...

Tonight.... chicken curry

Sat.... takeaway

Sun... lasagne which will also do me lunches for a few days.

Also thinking spaghetti carbonara one night as got all the ingredients already in, ditto sausage and mash.

WreckTangled · 13/05/2022 16:58

Oh all my paragraphs disappeared in my last post Confused mn is so bloody glitchy atm.

Mrs I'm hoping for a sunny weekend too!

The meal plan isn't particularly healthy but it's hard to find things that a) everybody likes and b) are quick to make as i'm exhausted by dinner time.

ememem84 · 13/05/2022 17:00

Been to the zoo. £7 ice creams for the three of us. We have a membership so don’t mind occasionally treating the kids.

Decafflatteplease · 13/05/2022 17:14

@ememem84 we have a couple of memberships too, definitely good value. It means we can just go for an hour or so and don't feel we have to stay all day to get our moneys worth.

However there's a farm park near us that all the children even the teens keep asking to go to, we went in Feb and it's £75 for a family ticket! We don't have membership for there as you would have to go every week as membership is something like £150 each it's ridiculous.

lifelongfrugaleer · 13/05/2022 18:35

£52 aldi
£12 M&S and did get a free loaf of bread
knocked sainsburys delivery down by £40 to as deducted aldi stuff that was cheaper
£75 currently

ememem84 · 13/05/2022 18:52

I love our zoo. Its worth the money in my mind. At almost £20 an adult out £160 pa membership is worth it.

we were there for about an hour. Sat with the orangutans for 20 mins. One came right up to the glass and put its hand up. Looked right into my soul it did.

i Love them. And would give anything to see them in real life.

earsup · 13/05/2022 23:52

Excellent shop at Waitrose tonight...went in at 8.45pm...mountains of reduced items...Duchy organic bread loaves at 25p....got 5...in freezer...ready meals all 40p...fruit...vegetable etc....got 2 bags of shopping for £5...last week was dreadful tho...only a few pence knocked off the items...!!...did a traffic survey and got a £10 voucher for Asda.....bracing myself to buy sunflower oil....its rocketed in price if you can get it...!!...all shops here only have expensive range of olive oils now on shelves.

HumbugWhale · 14/05/2022 07:12

Good bargains Earsup! I went in M&S last week to buy some shoes (which I have since returned!) and noticed tonnes of food with yellow stickers, this was first thing in the morning. I might go back when our freezer is a bit less full!

Gensola · 14/05/2022 07:25

Well done earsup - our Waitrose (nearest shop to us and the only supermarket I can get to on foot, super annoyingly!) is really stingy with the yellow stickers, there’s never more than 20-50p off even when it’s something like fish that you’d think they really need rid of!

I need to do a meal plan for this week, we have been running down the freezer stock so planning to batch cook a few things to freeze.