10 Tips to progress your savings habits

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When you use coupons, you save a lot of money. Money you can use to have reserves in your bank account. With reserves, you can weather the storms life throws at you.

Progress your saving habits with these 10 tips:

(1) Keep a piece of paper on the fridge to jot things down,beforeyou run out of them. This tool will remind you to watch for a good sale, and not pay retail out of desperation.

(2) Create and use a shopping list(the paper mentioned in Tip #1 can help here too). Shopping aimlessly is expensive. You end up buying things you don't really need ““ or worse, already have and forgot you did.

(3) Utilize a 2-pocket folder(the kind with prongs inside) to keep restaurant and non-grocery coupons in your vehicle. Inserting clear paper protectors in the folder offers several more “pockets” to hold multiple coupons. Now you have these coupons with you whenever you're out.

(4)Even if money is so tight it squeaks,set up auto-withdrawal or direct deposit to a savings account. Amounts as small as $5 a week will still add up over time. Automatic methods force it to happen, so you have resources in an emergency.

(5) If you have children, now is the time to plan their clothing for next school year.Thin out their current wardrobe and sell the good condition ones. (Start planning a spring yard sale, sell things on consignment or through online yard sales.) Recycle that money into clothes in the next size they'll need. Have a fashion-focused young one? Use the money to buy things that are classic, always usable, and always in style. And hit specialized consignment shops that feature the brands your teen wants.

(6) Think about dinner right after breakfast. Knowing what you'll serve early in the day affords time to prepare ““ and avoids eating out or ordering pizza because it's 6:00 p.m., everyone is starving, and nothing is started.

(7) Don't make quick decisions on purchases. Any purchase you do not make on a regular basis should be carefully evaluated, regardless of price. Think over whether or not youreallyneed the item; whether you cantrulyafford it; and, if yes to the first two, then still research prices to insure you're getting the absolute best deal.

(8) Review your monthly expenses at least once a quarter.You should be thinking about them each time you pay a bill, but this goes deeper. Analyze each to decide if you still need it and if you can't save more with another company.

(9) One week out of every month, execute a pantry challenge.A pantry challenge actually involves your pantry, cupboards, fridge, and freezer. Once a month, take a full week and devote it to using any close-dated items in these storage areas. Plan meals with these items, buying only ingredients absolutely necessary to complete the meals. Your family can be adventurous in trying new recipes to incorporate items, having breakfast at dinner or dinner at breakfast, choosing an eclectic approach to what makes a complete meal ““ and, best of all, your shopping list will be tiny that week.

(10) Keep track of your coupon savings and set the money you would have spent aside in an account to pay off debt, save for something special, or have general savings for an emergency.

Written by Josh Elledge - Chief Executive Angel

Josh Elledge Consumer Savings Expert and Founder/Chief Executive Angel, SavingsAngel.com®

Josh Elledge is on a mission to help Americans save money and time so they can give. He is Founder and Chief Executive Angel of SavingsAngel.com®, which was created to bolster the buying power of the average U.S. family by combining technology, coupons and smart thinking for extreme savings on household consumables and everyday items.

Through his work with SavingsAngel.com, Elledge has emerged as one of the nation's leading experts on consumer savings appearing in the media more than 2,000 times!

READ MY FULL BIO HERE: https://savingsangel.com/josh

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