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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 · 23/04/2022 07:47

Morning all!

Wolf that sounds like an awful day, you definitely needed that wine.

I like your new username Half!

Did loads of cooking yesterday, 2 types of soup and 3 types of curry and there is plenty left to eat over the weekend although not today as we are visiting friends. We are also going to soft play so will buy coffee to get through it!

I had some celery and parsnips going a but past it so I have peeled and trimmed, chopped and frozen ready to throw in a casserole or something. Hopefully that will work! I am trying really, really hard to avoid food waste for environmental reasons as much as frugal ones. These things are much easier in the school holidays when I have the time and energy though!

Have a lovely weekend everyone!

marthasmum · 23/04/2022 07:54

Lovely stuff mrs
em when I clicked on mrs’ links, it showed an elephant washing basket for £28 (handy as I was struggling to imagine what one looked like!)
In this house the washing is shared I have to say…I am the breadwinner though

WreckTangled · 23/04/2022 08:09

Dd has her second Covid vaccine today and then we're out for dinner for my dads birthday. It's a bit annoying as it's not somewhere we would usually go as it's expensive and fussy dd won't like any of it.

Wolfcub · 23/04/2022 08:16

Half I used a free one from Amazon for a while by Andrew Johnson (it's an app cost about £2). I found it very effective when I had a significant patch of insomnia. Now I use rain sounds to get off to sleep and when i wake in the night I trigger the rain sounds again and it works most of the time. I can be awake multiple times a night through a combo of stress/pain/night sweats/noisy teen

lifelongfrugaleer · 23/04/2022 09:06

Finding a topic and doing the a-z is meant to work. Doesn’t for me as I get cross when I can’t thing of a letter

we get mindfulness through work so definitely worth a check

writing it down with a note book by the bed works for me
flying home today

northender · 23/04/2022 09:09

Oh half and wreck lovely to see you both.
I've had a challenging week as we got back from hols on Monday evening, straight back into work Tuesday morning. Made it through & slept in a bit this morning. Today's priorities are a thorough meal plan & shopping list and working on my essay which is due in Tuesday week.
Need to get back to frugal ways...

northender · 23/04/2022 09:11

I do the A-Z thing life with varying success, but it passes the time!

ememem84 · 23/04/2022 10:14

martha tell a lie….£95!

riding today then ds and I are going to town to buy presents for both parties we’re going to tomorrow.

Amble into April Frugaleering
WreckTangled · 23/04/2022 12:19

FREE9873613 free card on moonpig, just pay delivery 85p. You can select when it's posted too so can use it for whichever birthday you have next.

Theskyoutsideisblue · 23/04/2022 18:49

Reworked budget. Ow

Theskyoutsideisblue · 23/04/2022 18:52

Power and fuel. Insane

lifelongfrugaleer · 24/04/2022 02:35

Well we are back on British soil. £200 over planned spend bit with in budget

WreckTangled · 24/04/2022 06:49

Welcome back life well done for staying in budget

Our electricity is still fixed. We're all electric but paying £115 a month, I'm dreading it ending in June, don't know if we should fix again or not. We're also going through £100 a week fuel Sad

NearlyHeadlessNick · 24/04/2022 07:31

Hello everyone, may I join you all please. I've lurked on your previous threads but putting my head above the parapet now 😁
I love your ideas and the advice you all offer to each other - it seems really supportive!
My DH has little to none interest in finances, so I love this outlet.
I'm always after ways to cut back, buy other than our nursery bill, 💷we try to be fairly frugal. Or at least we try to be while the DC are still little - I hear teen years are expensive😂

HumbugWhale · 24/04/2022 07:41

Thanks for the code Wreck.

Yesterday was so busy and we got home late. For once the dcs didn't get up at the crack of dawn - result!! Going to have a quiet day today and do a few jobs before we go back to school.

WreckTangled · 24/04/2022 07:44

I've got a spa day today. Used my Tesco vouchers and I can't wait.

Our meal last night was so expensive 😭 £60 not including drinks. Ffs.

ememem84 · 24/04/2022 07:58

Spends yesterday.

£13 cafe ds and me - coffee scones juice
£2.10 buss home me
£29 next - shorts for the dc
£54 the entertainer - presents for parties/upcoming birthdays.
£2.5 card factory
£26 jojo - sock for the dc. They are the only place I’ve found here who do grippy socks as standard. With our floor now they are even more essential!

also £40 stables. We went out for a glorious hack then came back for some cantering. My pony got a bit too over excited when it was our turn. She bombed off and I lost control of my steering and she launched us over a huge jump.

lifelongfrugaleer · 24/04/2022 08:42

Welcome nearly. We love a financial and everything else chat

oo that’s scary em. Dd pony did that and she took a bit of a confidence hit. Hope you are ok. The riding school should be able to give you some lessons on control, ours did

ememem84 · 24/04/2022 09:11

lifelongfrugaleer · 24/04/2022 08:42

Welcome nearly. We love a financial and everything else chat

oo that’s scary em. Dd pony did that and she took a bit of a confidence hit. Hope you are ok. The riding school should be able to give you some lessons on control, ours did

Usually pony is steady and controllable. No idea what got into her. Landed the jump though. I just held on. 😂

instructor reckons she’s (the pony) had an Easter hols being ridden by mostly novices. So she was testing her luck.

and luckily I ride her pretty much all the time I ride so am used to her. And was quick enough to just hold on and sit the canter. I wasn’t too fussed about the steering once I’d lost it. Just let her run off some steam. The jump was a suprise though. Highest I’ve ever done. Probably around 1m. In canter. Felt a bit like flying.

lifelongfrugaleer · 24/04/2022 10:32

Sounds exactly like dd pony. Just gets a bit excited and goes. Well done for staying on

Timetoswitch · 24/04/2022 12:56

Back from holiday this morning. Washing machine is busy!

It cost us £1.40 in gas/electric each day we were away from home, and that was after turning off/unplugging as much as possible. “Normal” day here with no heating on is approx £5 for both 😬

lifelongfrugaleer · 24/04/2022 13:30

£116 sainsburys delivery
£126 kennel fee balance
££ Aldi
£60 skatepark

Gensola · 24/04/2022 14:32

I dread to think what our bill will be as for various reasons we have been using washin g machine almost constantly and then in the cold snap the tumble dryer to dry.
Considering reverting to Lidl for weekly shop, do people find it cheaper?

lifelongfrugaleer · 24/04/2022 16:12

Moral of that story don’t shop when tired. £30 M&S
£40 aldi

i use aldi and it’s cheaper than sainsburys on lots of things but more expensive than others. Depends what you get I suppose. You will most likely need to try

i do a sainsburys online shop then delete from the basket what I get on aldi cheaper

Happierwithouthim · 24/04/2022 16:26

Took ds to a birthday party this morn
€20 in card
Took dd for breakfast €15
Went to Dunnes €55 a beautiful pink glass lamp for my room, leggings for dd & some vacuum storage bags for all the dresses which don't fit me currently
Iceland €54.80 on cat & dog food some snacks & cleaning supplies
Lucozade for ds €1.80
Primark €130
Easons €99
Lunch out €20.25
Frozen fantas €5.50

I hate town, I hate shopping

Gen I'm an Aldi girl

Em scary or exhilarating?

Wreck wow fuel costs