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a money saving thre...
 

a money saving thread for the cash poor amongst us.

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Separate quotes for buildings and content insurance. I saved £150 this year.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 12:57 pm
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Convert Tesco club card vouchers into money off the channel tunnel crossing

Or, get the ferry instead for a cheaper, longer but more chilled crossing.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 12:59 pm
nuke and nuke reacted
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[i]do they remove any swarf or stuff you should be looking for in an oil change?[/i]

Most of it. You run the engine until warm so most the crap is then floating in the oil you pump out. It is all the garage does anyway, and they don't always run the engine first


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:16 pm
rogerturner, kayak23, rogerturner and 1 people reacted
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The biggest change I’ve made recently is to start using a budgeting app called MoneyHub. It uses the open banking standard to aggregate our family accounts, credit cards, pensions, mortgage in one place and every time a transaction is made on any of them the app categorises the expenditure into things like groceries, fuel, savings, transfers etc etc. I’ve had to do some work to check and update the automatic categorisation but now I’m up and running, as soon as I buy something I habitually check the app to see what it’s showing as and update/approve as appropriate. The app then gives me a dashboard of monthly expenditure  so I can see just how much I’ve spent against each category.

I also export the data periodically into an excel doc which I’ve designed to analyse and collate the expenditure across Jan - Dec. Using 2024 data, this gave me a really good idea of our typical expenditure per month against each category, and I’ve created a monthly budget that I’ve incorporated back into the app.

I share the app with my wife and it’s really helping us to see where our money is going and to understand what (if any) discretionary expenditure we can afford. It’s also helped us to identify some fraudulent transactions that we missed.

If we stick to the budget, we should be able to save a couple of hundred £ per month instead of having to dive into savings every month to pay the credit card bill.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:17 pm
tomahawk28, thebunk, thebunk and 1 people reacted
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Buy luxury Christmas puddings now, the Tesco ones are aged 12 months, by next Christmas they’ll be 24 months and even more delicious but a fraction of the price. Ignore the use by date, we had two from last year, feeds 8 or two people over three meals!


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:22 pm
MoreCashThanDash, steveb, kelvin and 3 people reacted
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If it meets the spec it's fine

I'm thinking of some previous threads about tyres on here yet no one on here would dare admit to Nanking/****ing Chinese rubber on their Skoda Octavia/Yeti

These ditch finders meet the spec, personally I'd whip them off and change to a Michelin

Sometimes can get up to 50k miles if no punctures and good at dodging the many pot holes so can easily save you in the long run cost wise


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:23 pm
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Buy your birthday cards from us.

The exact same card can be over a pound more in Smiths.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:32 pm
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I’m thinking of some previous threads about tyres on here yet no one on here would dare admit to Nanking/**** Chinese rubber on their Skoda Octavia/Yeti

These ditch finders meet the spec, personally I’d whip them off and change to a Michelin

Sometimes can get up to 50k miles if no punctures and good at dodging the many pot holes so can easily save you in the long run cost wise

I've never fitted* for anything other than name brand tyres, that's different because you can actually judge what the benefit is. The EcoConact/energy saver/Blue Response etc all last longer, are quieter, get good ratings for grip / efficiency and rate well in magazine tests.  And subjectively feel nicer.

Branded oil on the other hand?

Our Fiestas done 174k on cheap-ish oil (but does use/leak oil, has done form new) and has spent 21 years being alternately driven round town cold by my OH who treats the pedals as binary switches, or thrashed up the motorway at Mach 0.11 to Yorkshire and back. The C-max did 160k before and never lost a drop.  The Berlingo had 3 changes in the time I had it between 130k and 160k and never had an issue on cheap oil.  I know a few people have had expensive oil analysis done to see what impact it has, but even that comes with the massive caveats that it's not a direct comparison between oils, just an analysis of how that oil is performing.  And you can't define what the impact of any difference is. Even if A was better than B, it doesn't follow that B will have any meaningfully impact on the engine if it meets the spec and you change it on time.

*i've had less well known brands on cars I've bought


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:42 pm
iwluap and iwluap reacted
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I’ve never fitted* for anything other than name brand tyres, that’s different because you can actually judge what the benefit is.

I've always fitted middle-range, if that the right description (i.e. Landsail/Hankook) tyres as I'm extremely sceptical as to the benefit of name brand tyres on a 1.4 hatchback.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:51 pm
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I have Clubcard+ it's pretty good, costs £7 a month, I usually get about £20 'back'. I can understand why the poster thinks they're getting hundreds a year. The Clubcard app pushes a "saved this year" figure which includes normal club card discounts. You can also get 10% off Tesco brand non-food items too, so if you like F&F stuff... I don't, it's all shapeless and drab.

I suppose due to my advanced years I've learned rich v poor, happy v unhappy isn't about saving a penny on beans, bulk buying in Costco, driving £500 bangers or whatever.

Some people are genuinely poor. If you're in that horrible place when every penny counts and it's 'eat or heat' or new clothes for the kids v council tax then you have my complete sympathy, and I hope you're able to make life easier for yourself.

When I was younger, I got caught in the capitalist trap. I always thought that I couldn't be happy until I had the 'thing' I'd been fooled into thinking was important. New House, New Car, Holidays, Bikes, TVs, Phones, but I never was, I just felt increased strain to keep it up. The only money saving tip that's ever worked for me has been to be content as much as I can be. I try to let go of material things that don't bring real joy. Simple things bring real joy to me, sitting in the pub having a pint and sharing a bag of crisps is cheap, but if you can't spare the money for that, sitting in a friend's kitchen with a cup of tea is just as good really. You don't need £500's worth of hiking kit to go for a walk. A copy of a good book for 50p from a charity shop reads just as well as a £15 hardback or via a £100 kindle.

I'm not miserly, but I try to pause when I'm buying something - do I need this? Do I want this? Will this bring real joy? I have no problem buying things I want, but I avoid 'consumer nonsense' when I can.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 1:54 pm
wheelsonfire1, lb77, stgeorge and 21 people reacted
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"I’m thinking of some previous threads about tyres on here yet no one on here would dare admit to Nanking/**** Chinese rubber on their Skoda Octavia/Yeti

These ditch finders meet the spec, personally I’d whip them off and change to a Michelin

Sometimes can get up to 50k miles if no punctures and good at dodging the many pot holes so can easily save you in the long run cost wise"

I do consider tyre choice a bit. If you're asking your fitter for 'economy tyres' you're often doing the opposite. The don't last long, they puncture easily and they do have a meaningful effect on safety and handling.

Michelin make incredible tyres, if you've got something sporty then their Pilot Sport range offer an incredible balance of performance and longevity and their more eco focused tyres do save a dribble fuel and last a long time.

I think the best VFM though is in the middle ground, the brands that make good quality tyres, but perhaps not the same marketing budget, such a wide range or bother with high performance stuff for sports cars. Kumho, Avon, Uniroyal etc. They're cheaper than Michelin, Continental and Pirelli and may lose a bit of absolute performance (useless on that 1.4 hatch back) but a massively better made and long lasting than typical Linglong Ditchfinders.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 2:04 pm
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I occasionally shop at Tesco, but do 95% of my groceries at Lidl - and I'm certain I'm saving a lot more than I could with a Clubcard+.

As mentioned by another poster, you get loads of freebies like bakery items, cheese, fruit etc. - plus a monthly 10% discount if you spend £250 over the month.

And the quality of produce is often better anyway.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 2:26 pm
steveb and steveb reacted
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If you ride clipless then never buy brand new.

Lots of people buy brand new pedals and shoes to give clipless a go, try them out and hate them and then flog them cheap on FB Marketplace, sometimes I’ve paid just postage.

I have actually bought a couple of pairs of "Knackered" used M520 (already a cheap pair of pedals), disassemble (with £2 special tool) grease up and adjust bearings and you'll get another decade out of them no bother. Saves even more


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 2:48 pm
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And the quality of produce is often better anyway.

I've not found this to be the case. We shop in both and there are certainly some items that are better but not that many things. Much of the time the quality is similar but it's cheaper which is great. Worth going to both if you have the time


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 3:01 pm
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I think the best VFM though is in the middle ground, the brands that make good quality tyres, but perhaps not the same marketing budget, such a wide range or bother with high performance stuff for sports cars. Kumho, Avon, Uniroyal etc. They’re cheaper than Michelin, Continental and Pirelli and may lose a bit of absolute performance (useless on that 1.4 hatch back) but a massively better made and long lasting than typical Linglong Ditchfinders.

I dunno, Michelin Energy Savers, Dunlop BluResponse,  Conti EcoContanct, IME they last ~2x as long as the basic tyres, 25-30k on the front rather than ~15k..

I'd agree there's not much real world difference between the mid-range Kumho, Avon, Firestone and Michelin, Conti, Dunlop tires though. I've got Firestones on the Midget as they're the only tyres apart form uniroyal (which I found far too soft) that fit and aren't trailer-spec ditch finders.

I'm not suggesting Pilot-Sports, R888R or NS2R's on a 1.4 hatchback either.

But like shoes there's money to be saved by getting the slightly more expensive ones that last a lot longer.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 3:09 pm
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I’ve not found this to be the case. We shop in both and there are certainly some items that are better but not that many things. Much of the time the quality is similar but it’s cheaper which is great. Worth going to both if you have the time

That's fair, a lot is similar but cheaper.

I was mainly thinking of some of my key items like cheese, bakery and cold meats where you get what Tesco would label as a premium product.

Veg can be better or worse TBF.

Hope this isn;t derailing the thread.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 3:09 pm
mezimov and mezimov reacted
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Back when I did my own spannering out of necessity, I always took my car to my Friendly Local Garage for an oil change. It might well be easy but it's a nasty job and the cost difference between paying RRP for oil+filter vs paying someone else to do it was negligible.

I actually came on here to posy “Be nice to people, even if they are not being particularly nice at the time”.

I learned this back in my days in Tech Support. The people who were nice, you'd go out of your way for. Mr Angry got the bare minimum of service we could get away with providing.

Google opinion rewards pays me just enough to cover the cost of

I'm surprised this hasn't cropped up before and I keep meaning to start a thread about it. It's simple surveys, "have you visited Tesco recently?" - "no" - "thanks, here's 8p." But it adds up, I've got about £20 in my account at any given moment, perfect for those moments where you'll spend several hundred quid on a phone but begrudge paying 69p for an app.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 3:22 pm
kelvin and kelvin reacted
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I learned this back in my days in Tech Support. The people who were nice, you’d go out of your way for. Mr Angry got the bare minimum of service we could get away with providing.

Same here, except swap Tech Support for 'behind the counter at a post office', 'behind a bar', 'as a clerk in bank branch' - nice people got lots of help, ranty angry people not so much (all though I did enjoy being extra, extra, obsequiously nice to ranty angry people, as it made them even angrier 😉 )

What's this Google opinion rewards thing then?

*Edit - it's alright, I, er Googled it.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 3:41 pm
alpin, kelvin, chakaping and 3 people reacted
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Same here, except swap Tech Support for ‘behind the counter at a post office’, ‘behind a bar’, ‘as a clerk in bank branch’ – nice people got lots of help, ranty angry people not so much (all though I did enjoy being extra, extra, obsequiously nice to ranty angry people, as it made them even angrier ? )

My local garage and local bike shop (both independent family run places) work along these lines. The garage has helped me out many times for cheap, allowed me to pay half now, half next month on an expensive repair and so on.

In return, I'm on their list of reliable people who'll look after/walk their dog occasionally and if I walk past on my way to town I'll ask if they want anything from the supermarket, if they need to send anything from the post office, that sort of thing.

And my LBS will almost always accommodate any sort of "can you just...?" repair or tweak.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 4:10 pm
nickjb, chakaping, cinnamon_girl and 3 people reacted
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I once got put onto the next easyJet flight after they oversold mine.  The guy ahead of me had a long wait after getting shouty with customer services.

So on the one had the moral is don't fly easyjet and arrive towards the end of check-in and still expect to fly.

On the other hand I got 250euro and my transfers paid!


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 4:18 pm
nickjb and nickjb reacted
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"extra, extra, obsequiously nice to ranty angry people, as it made them even angrier"

A colleague of mine once had a ned try to make a formal complaint about him.  My colleague had done nothing wrong and the ned was annoyed at being called sir whilst being booked.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 4:39 pm
 rsl1
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Nectar card plus use of their app for me.

I doubt anyone truly needing to save money is shopping at sainos but regardless I'll say it's worth cycling through different nectar cards. My partner did all the shopping for a few months and when I came back to it using my own card i got "£13.50 off £90" 4 weeks in a row to try and drag me back into shopping there.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 4:56 pm
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Be fussy about drafts, and be active in adding insulation to your home.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 5:18 pm
Bunnyhop and Bunnyhop reacted
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When shopping for food and other “commodity” items I shop by price - they don’t really care about you, they just want your business and price is the calling card.  For more specialist purchases - bike kit etc, I am happy to cultivate a relationship with the retailer because they usually value you as a longer term client and at some point it’ll be repaid in terms of getting a bike repaired at short notice or unexpectedly coughing up an unrequested discount.

Also, I don’t know if it is because there has been a cultural change or I am just more confident but i find “if you don’t ask you don’t get” is an increasingly well rewarded motto.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 5:34 pm
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Learn to love Indian vegetarian food. Ideally cook it in big batches and freeze portions.

We’ve had a few holiday bargains. This one was even going away money was tight

This was an off season half term holiday. After lowers loads of googling i found a surely to good to be true £250 starts caravan, on the Gower, for a week. Trying to check if it was genuine i phone the number and had a jolly chat with the owner. Who was clearly Welsh, which was reassuring. So i checked with mrs Ampthill and then phoned her back. More jolly chat and she said she’d throw in breakfast every day in her hotel for free. So that was 28 cooked breakfasts and the holiday for £250


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 5:48 pm
wheelsonfire1, andy4d, chakaping and 3 people reacted
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...now signed up to google opinion rewards...


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 6:05 pm
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Use both sides of your loo roll.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 7:08 pm
kayak23 and kayak23 reacted
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Partly inspired by this thread, that's my thriftyness done for now.

Moved a few of the expired ISA's to another fixed term/high rate deal,  SWMBO phone transferred from EE after they doubled her fee to 1pMobile back at her original price for more 'stuff' (still on the EE network bizarrely) and moved the leccy from Scottish Power to Fuse saving a couple of £100's pa. Let's hope Fuse deal with Customers well if there's ever an occasion to contact them...

There now, I can now buy that totally gratuitous Faberge egg or gold Rolex on the savings and retire undefeated... 🙂


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 7:22 pm
Steve_B and Steve_B reacted
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A few tips from my tight thrifty lifestyle:

  1. Never pay cash for anything. Always pay on a cashback or rewards card - Chase debit card gives 1% back on most purchases with some exceptions. Amex is good if you can use the points but otherwise can be a false economy with the fee etc. Of course there are lots of threads online about how to get the most out of cashback/rewards cards and lots of dubious but legal ways to maximise them (eg undetectable manufactured spending).
  2.  Always make sure your oven is full. If there is space cook up something else that you can freeze for another meal and microwave later.
  3. In a similar vein, never let food go off. If its on its way out then cook something with it then freeze it.
  4. Learn to repair things rather than pay for new/someone to fix them.
  5. Empty your car of random junk to save on fuel bills. Top up fuel in the morning as the air is colder and the fuel is less dense so you get more. However don't drive out of your way for cheap fuel as its a false economy.

 
Posted : 07/01/2025 8:41 pm
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There’s a woman called Sophie Morris around on the web who reads the small print on packaging to save us from doing it. She suggests swaps for ingredients and products that are healthier and cheaper, it’s surprising the number of “quality” products that are full of rubbish and the cheaper ones that are better!


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 8:43 pm
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Cycle to work instead of drive.

Use curtains properly.

Cheap combs work just as well as expensive combs*

* not that I ever actually comb my hair


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 9:22 pm
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I've deleted all buying apps from my mobile. So no vinted, eBay, Amazon etc.

If I need something I need to buy I have to log onto my desktop PC.

That break has stopped a lot of silly purchases that I didn't need, often bought after a few beers.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 9:35 pm
leffeboy and leffeboy reacted
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That break has stopped a lot of silly purchases that I didn’t need, often bought after a few beers.

I keep a list of items I want to buy in my amazon basket (even if I don't end up buying from amazon, its a handy list).

If it's been sat in my basket more than, say 1 month, then I delete it. or buy it.

Doesnt work for things you do actually need, as you just buy them anyway, but it's a handy impulse purchase filter.


 
Posted : 07/01/2025 9:54 pm
hightensionline, wheelsonfire1, leffeboy and 7 people reacted
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And if you add them into your Amazon basket then you can buy when you have enough for free postage rather than pay for postage individually.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 10:05 am
iwluap and iwluap reacted
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I’ve deleted all buying apps from my mobile. So no vinted, eBay, Amazon etc.

If I need something I need to buy I have to log onto my desktop PC.

That break has stopped a lot of silly purchases that I didn’t need, often bought after a few beers.

In a similar vein, whenever you get a marketing / sales email through just hit "unsubscribe" rather than reading it.

Not having an Amazon Prime sub also means making fewer impulse purchases (especially now the min order for free postage is now £35) - as witnessed by the uptick when I had a month's free trial before Christmas.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 10:11 am
leffeboy, J-R, leffeboy and 1 people reacted
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Buy a reconditioned second hand phone.

Make your own lunches, you can make sandwiches, salad type foods in a container and wraps the night before and they'll be fine the next day kept in the fridge.

Drink water. When I boil the kettle, there is a flask to fill too, thus not having to boil the kettle many times in a day.

Shut off all the rooms you may not use at night and put on an extra layer of clothing.

Use refill shops. Buying just the amount you need for a recipe, then food isn't left in a cupboard for months going off. Don't waste food. Crusts make a really nice bread and butter pudding.

I use local independent shops, the price of 2 decent good quality sausages from a butcher (probably made from a nearby farm) works out better than a pack of rubbish from the supermarket. A lot of these shops have their own 'points' schemes and even a day of the week where it's 10% discount for the over 60's.

Save your ironing for one huge blitz. Heating an iron up for one or two items is costly.

Try to dry clothes outside (when it's the warmer months of the year). We don't have a dryer and use the smallest room in the house, south facing (great if the sun comes through the window).

Buy and use a slow cooker. Batch cook and freeze. Plan meals, then food isn't wasted.

I use the microwave for all veg cooking. This saves not only money but keeps all the goodness and vitamins from being boiled away.

Buy garden plants from the sale section. In the local garden centre they may look dead, but come spring that little plant will spring into life. Take cuttings, swap seeds and barter any excess produce you grow.

If you are thinking of a big purchase, find an independent maker. I make curtains and don't charge VAT. Somewhere such as John Lewis will be about 20% - 30% higher on mark up. They are well made and will last for years if fully lined and customers look after them. A curtain across a doorway in a hall will really keep the warmth in.

I also use Vinted and last year sold a lot of items (not just clothes).

We 'do' our own garden, wash our own windows and don't have a cleaner :0)

Barter. I once made a lot of Roman blinds for a joiner, who in return helped put up some of our new doors, he then taught hubby to hang the rest.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 11:18 am
ultrasound, wheelsonfire1, integra and 19 people reacted
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I occasionally shop at Tesco, but do 95% of my groceries at Lidl – and I’m certain I’m saving a lot more than I could with a Clubcard

Similar savings by shopping at Aldi.

We use a flask for tea/coffee when out and about, saves loads.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 12:35 pm
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Learn to repair things rather than pay for new/someone to fix them.

YouTube has been great for enabling this.

Just been learning how to re-felt my shed roof.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 12:55 pm
iwluap and iwluap reacted
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Buy a whole chicken.£2.50 a Kilo. Use YouTube on how to cut up. For the two of us this win last for 3 meals. Use the carcass for chicken stock. Prince Chicken fillets cost £7.50 a kilo. Could save you upto £250 a year. An easy win.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 12:57 pm
andy4d, jamesoz, Bunnyhop and 3 people reacted
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Borrowed from the Zwift thread:

Use the 25km free each month more effectively by either riding AdZ or Ven-Top first. They're both <25km and Ven-Top will take you over an hour at least meaning you'll get at least 2 free sessions a month ~(it doesn't stop at 25k, it just won't let you start a new ride) .  Perfect for those of us who like Zwift on a crap day, but don't like it enough to want to use it the rest of the time.

Buy a whole chicken.£2.50 a Kilo. Use YouTube on how to cut up. For the two of us this win last for 3 meals. Use the carcass for chicken stock. Prince Chicken fillets cost £7.50 a kilo. Could save you upto £250 a year. An easy win.

Contemplate how little must have been spent on that animals welfare that it can be laid, collected, hatched, reared, transported, slaughtered and butchered, transported and sold to you at a profit for £2.50.

Then go veggie.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 1:06 pm
crossed, doris5000, FB-ATB and 5 people reacted
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That’s for the rest of the week. Or go the whole hog, no pun intended; go vegan.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 1:24 pm
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Save your ironing for one huge blitz. Heating an iron up for one or two items is costly.

Sack off ironing completely. About the only time I pick up an iron is for smart shirts, and the only time I wear a smart shirt is a wedding or a funeral. Going out for a meal, shirts off a hanger are close enough (I hate going out for meals anyway, that's a tip in itself).


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 1:59 pm
doris5000, funkmasterp, nuke and 11 people reacted
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Spend money where it matters. If you're paying more for something, is the price hike representative of the quality increase?

Random examples: Ketchup. Outside of posh sauces it's (probably) indisputable that Heinz is the superior product, certainly it's the market leader. But Heinz is (off the top of my head) something like 60p/100g. Tesco's own brand is ~16p/100g. Heinz is better, but is it four times better? It is not, I switched to Tesco.

Cola. A 2L bottle of Coke/Pepsi is £1.50 if you juggle offers. The off-brand bottle at the shop round the corner is £1. Is Coke/Pepsi 50% better? I think it is personally, I'll buy the brand unless it's at inflated prices.

A 2L bottle of supermarket Lemonade can be had for 40p. Given that it's fizzy water that's been shown a picture of a lemon once, paying £2 for Schweppes is firmly into 'having a laugh' territory when it's only going to be used as a mixer with cordial or alcohol anyway.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 2:20 pm
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Here's one that's served me well:

Stop

Buying

Shit

You

Don't

Need.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 3:25 pm
thenorthwind, funkmasterp, J-R and 11 people reacted
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Speaking of Amazon, sure make your list, then shop around.
They are rarely the cheapest for mainstream brands, maybe the most convenient.


 
Posted : 08/01/2025 4:32 pm
funkmasterp, leffeboy, funkmasterp and 1 people reacted
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