Want to know the secrets to saving more money on food? (Spoiler–It’s not always using coupons!) We’ll share how to cut your grocery bill in half.
Let’s face it–food is expensive. The average family spends just over 10% of their household income buying groceries–over $6,000 a year–and even while average wages have gone down, the price of food keeps going up. When you are just trying to feed your family, that is a pretty scary prospect.
That said, as more and more people are beginning to realize, coupons can be a great way to save money on food. If you’ve ever watched TLC’s Extreme Couponing, you probably already know that sometimes those savings can be quite dramatic. The problem is that those dramatic savings often come from seasoned coupon users who have spent countless hours clipping & sorting coupons and searching for the very best deals.
Quite frankly, who has time for that?
A few weeks ago I was asked by the nice people at WINK News to share some tips for saving on groceries. They tagged along as I prepared for one of my own shopping trips, and then as I shopped with Kristen, a single mom of 4 who had never used coupons before and was looking for some practical ways to cut her food budget in half.
For Kristen and probably every other average mom (or dad) who is just trying to save some money on groceries, the idea of all that time and energy on a single shopping trip was not only overwhelming, it was unrealistic. However, as I explained to Kristen, it IS possible to cut your grocery bill in half without spending all your time clipping coupons. In fact, even if you never clip a single coupon, you can still save significant money on your grocery bill just by changing the way that you shop.
Like anything in life, you have to find the right balance. That balance won’t be exactly the same for everyone, but there are 5 tips I shared with both Kristen and WINK that everyone should know:
I’m going to let you in on a little secret that the producers of TLC’s Extreme Couponing (and every food company and grocery store chain out there) don’t really want you to know: Extreme grocery savings do NOT, for the most part, come from the coupons. The bulk of your savings will come from the store sales. The better the promotion, the bigger the savings, so the FIRST step in saving money on your grocery bill is to SHOP THE SALES.
Always, always, always buy food when it is on sale or at its rock bottom price. And by this I mean really on sale, as in 30-50% off the regular price, not one of those “Surprising Low Price” items. (The surprise is that it’s not really on sale!) Compare the store sale ads in your area to find out which stores have the best sale prices, and keep an ongoing price list so that you KNOW when something is a good price.
This does NOT mean that you should buy food just because it is on sale, but instead be on the lookout for sale prices on the food your family normally buys, whether it be all whole foods, organic, or gluten free. Almost everything goes on sale eventually.
Don’t assume you know which store has the best deals until you’ve actually checked–you may be surprised at what you find. Here in Florida, for example, many people assume Publix is the “expensive” store, but when you compare sale ads you will find that Publix consistently has the best sales week after week. Many people also automatically assume that Walmart has the best prices, but most sale prices at a traditional grocery store will beat Walmart’s “everyday low price.” While it has not yet come to my area, I have also heard amazing things about Aldi, so if you are lucky enough to have one in your area, definitely take the time to check it out and compare prices. Because in the end, it is all about the price you pay.
Thus, your goal from now on is to only EVER buy an item when it is at its lowest price. Period.
In order to only ever buy an item at its lowest price, you must buy enough of it while it is on sale to last until it goes on sale again. This is key. Most items go on sale every 6-8 weeks, which means you need to buy enough to last your family that long. If you buy only a weeks worth, you will be forced to pay more the next time you need it because you didn’t buy enough.
Let me make it more clear with an example. Say your family eats 2 boxes of Honey Nut Cheerios every week. The regular price for Honey Nut Cheerios is $4.50 a box, but when you go to the store this week, you see it is on sale for only $1.99 a box–more than 50% off the regular price! Instead of buying only 2 boxes like you normally would for your weekly shopping trip, you buy 12 boxes–enough to last your family for the next 6 weeks at less than half the price you would normally pay.
At first it may seem counterintuitive to be buying more than you normally would instead of less. However, because you are shopping the sales each week, you will be buying a larger quantity of a smaller variety of items, which means your overall grocery bill will still go down. The goal is to build up your own mini-grocery store in your pantry which you can then use to plan your family’s meals.
Remember that a well-varied stockpile does NOT have to take up a whole room of your house, and you do NOT need to accumulate a whole year’s worth of food. Sale cycles generally run about 6-8 weeks, which means your stockpile should contain about 6-8 weeks worth of a nice variety of food. It also means that it will take about 6-8 weeks before you’ve built up a nice varied stockpile and will start to see the most dramatic savings in your grocery bill.
Furthermore, stockpiling does not mean your family has to only eat a diet of processed food. There are plenty of healthy options for stockpiling, including beans, rice, whole grain pastas, whole grain cereals, frozen vegetables, cheese & other dairy products, canned tomatoes, & more.
Going vegetarian just a couple times a week could save you as much as $1,000 a year. Meat costs usually account for a significant portion of people’s grocery bills, so cutting out even a little will make a big difference over time. One of the ways my own family has kept our grocery bill to around $200-300 a month is by eating very little meat and honestly I am shocked at the prices whenever I do buy meat!
I have personally been a vegetarian for almost twenty years, which makes it a little easier for me to come up with creative meat-free meals. However, since the rest of my family is NOT vegetarian, I do make an effort to cook meatless meals that even my meat-loving husband and kids can enjoy.
Here are some of our favorite family-friendly meat-free recipes:
I realize that not everyone wants to become a vegetarian, so when you do buy your chicken, beef, or pork, remember to stick to the principles above–buy only what is on sale, and stock up if it is a great deal. Be sure to also check out these ideas for more great ways to save on meat.
If you normally wing it when it comes to meal planning, running to the store several times a week for last-minute dinner items, this step won’t be as painful as you might think. Instead of running to the store for your dinner supplies you’ll be able to run to your stockpile–a ready-made grocery store right in your own home. You may even find that maintaining a nice, varied stockpile by shopping the sales once a week saves you a whole lot of time, in addition to saving you from the expensive impulse and last-minute buys.
For those of you who normally plan your meals then make your shopping list based on that plan, this adjustment may be a little harder. However, you can still make it work if you get into the habit of planning your meals around what’s on sale and around what items you already have on hand in your stockpile. By minimizing the number of non-sale items you need to buy each week you will find that you can plan your meals in advance and still cut your grocery bill in half.
One great meal-planning resource that I have been really impressed with E-Meals. For as little as $5 a month you can receive a customized weekly meal plan based on your own store’s weekly sale ad. The simple recipes are delicious and family friendly, and although the service isn’t free, it does take a lot of the stress out of trying to plan meals around what’s on sale. They even have a great new app that allows you to get your shopping list, meal plan, & recipes right on your phone or tablet. You can also try it for FREE for two weeks!
It is not by accident that using coupons is the last item on this list and not the first. Coupons can and do save you a ton of money on your grocery bill, but only if you follow these other steps first. When and if you make these changes in the way you shop–getting into the habit of shopping for only what’s on sale, buying enough to last your family 6-8 weeks, eating less meat, and planning your meals around your stockpile and what’s on sale–you will see a dramatic drop in your grocery bill, even without clipping a single coupon.
When you begin to match coupons to the things that are already on sale you will see savings that are even more dramatic–50 to 60% off your grocery bill or more! Doing this consistently, week after week, you can literally cut your grocery bill in half.
Learning to match coupons to store sales is not nearly as confusing or intimidating as it might sound. Two years ago I wrote a very easy-to-follow 8 week series called The Beginner’s Guide to Coupons that has since taught thousands of people how to do it, from the very first step of just getting started to making your first shopping list to building a stockpile. It breaks down the whole process into manageable “baby steps,” complete with assignments to get you going, and it is completely free.
One of the most common complaints I hear about coupons is that they are all for unhealthy processed food. While this is to some degree true, there ARE coupons available for healthier food options too. There are almost always coupons available for things like yogurt, cheese, soy or almond milk, frozen vegetables, oatmeal, coffee & tea, gluten-free foods, cereal, and basic pantry staples such as pasta, canned tomatoes, and rice. There are also plenty of coupons available for non-food items such as shampoo, toilet paper, paper towels, cleaning supplies, and over-the-counter medicine.
The important thing to remember is that coupons come last, not first. Don’t buy something just because you have a coupon–manufacturer’s count on that! Wait for the sale, then use the coupon. Changing old patterns and shopping habits is never easy, but with these simple changes you really can cut your grocery bill in half.
Just think of what you could do with an extra $75 a week!
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Hi! I found your blog via Pinterest, and I found this post super helpfull.
We're a little family of two (plus Cuba, our dog, but he has his own food all set up already haha), and everything you say is the pure truth regarding saving money on food.
We live in Salvador de Bahia, Brazil, and there are no cupons over here, but everything else you mention, applies: Leandro doesn't eat meat but sparefishes, so our freezer is constantly full of fish, lobster, octopus, etc. I do eat meat and chicken, but never buy meat (I'm lazy when it comes to cook meat and cleaning after, on top of the price) and just some half chicken monthly.
We stock as you say, and, believe me, it makes the whole difference. We do one montlhy big grocery shopping, for around R$200,00 (pretty much some... $100,00 dolars, maybe less), and it lasts the whole month. And it's not just groceries, it's everything: cleaning products, toiletries, etc. Sometimes lasts even more than that, but it doesn't matter: from the 1rst to the 5th day of every month, we do our montlhy grocery shopping religiously. And to be honest, we haven't even paid R$200,00 in quite sometime. That was the first big one we did, and then our grocery began to stock, so lately it's been around R$150,00 or so.
We do some shopping during the month, of course, like milk, eggs, cheese, but it tops R$50,00 at the very (VERY) most, plus tons of fruit and veggies weekly (there's this farmers market we love), and thats may be, R$20,00, R$30,00 if we go fruit crazy, and most of the times one shopping lasts a week and a half, so by the week we buy just R$10,00 or R$15,00.
I don't know where your traffic comes from, but I can certify that your methods applies in economies beyond the American one. Stocking is THE way to saving.
Nice to meet you!
Tini.-
I am willing to spend some time searching for coupons. One of my issues with coupon sites is everything they make you download plus they do too many add-ons if you ar enot careful. I do not want to clutter up my computer. Any coupon sites that are easy to get coupons.
Hi all, here every person is sharing such experience, so it's good to read this blog, and I used to go to see this webpage all the time.
Well i always tends to use coupons no matter how small discount it gives.It really makes you feel better even to save a single penny.You said about stockpiling but how can we stock pile food items that will get spoiled like eggs ,meat etc.Other than that i really enjoyed reading your post
loved all the article i have not figured out everything yet i'm a new to couponing
Loved the article!!! Speaking of Publix, have you figured out how often they do BOGO? I feel like I can really stock up during their buy one get one sales but I never when to expect them!
Thank you!
good ideas unless you trying to avoid GMO food and all things processed
I agree, there is no way you can follow this and maintain a healthy lifestyle. I don't see anywhere fresh fruits and vegetables. Stockpile?? You can't do that with produce. I barely have anything in my pantry because I don't use the "canned", "packaged" "mystery" foods. How about organic tips?? $200 a month for groceries? My goodness I do well over $200 per week. Guess I'll need to look elsewhere for tips.
This is crazy. I spend an astronomical amount to eat mostly organic and grass fed meats. I spend more on food than my mortgage. The last time I could spend $200 a month on food was when I was 19 and ignorant on food's importance on health. Read Weston Price.
wow you orthorexic people are insufferable. it's ok to incorporate "some" processed foods into your diet, and I'm sure 1/2 the foods you think are bad for you aren't really. All of the high horse comments about how if you eat like this you'll have "hospital bills" are soooo annoying. Eyes on your own plate. P.S There is no evidence that GMO foods are worse for your health.
Weston Price and Joel Salatan, read them. They are not orthorexic, nor are those who follow their ideas on real food.
When I worked at Albertson's (I conesfs years ago) the cashiers were told if it says manufacture coupon to take it. It just meant that Target or Walmart or whoever just wanted the customer to think they had to go there instead of look for the cheapest price. At that time it was corporate that told me that, and that we want them to shop here not there so take it.
Agreed. There is absolutely no way you can save money like this if you eat healthy. Grass fed beef, organic fruits and vegetables barely go on sale and when you eat meals made from scratch you want the freshest produce. Raw organic nuts and seeds are also priced much higher and they do not go on sale.
Agreed. There is absolutely no way you can save mi eh like this if you eat healthy.
Totally agree with both comments here. We too eat non-gmo and organic. We also avoid all soy like the plague... which immediately rules out like 95% of anything processed. (You'd be surprised where they slip that crap into your food!) Does anyone have tips on saving money while avoiding processed garbage and GMO's?
Over and over I have seen our local stores refuse to honor coupons if the item is already on sale. You can either get the coupon price or the sale price but you may NOT put them together on the same item. I've seen your advice many times before and it always baffles me. Who actually allows this?
I beg to differ. Major grocery store chains will always allow you to use a coupon on a sale item. Most will allow you to stack a store coupon with a manufacturer coupon on top!
This is not allowed in California. Even when going to the Major grocery stores they will not allow you to use a coupon on a sale item. I hear other states you can.
I'm in California and have used coupons on sale items for years.
Eat less meat, and eat more processed garbage aka pasta, grains, and rice . Yep saving money at the expense often family and my own health. Sounds like a plan to me ! Ugh -- SMH !
Actually there are plenty of cost effective and very healthy prepackaged foods.
Quinoa as a rice alternative is high in fibre and protein, cooks exactly like rice.
Depending where you live Smart Pasta carries noodles that have 11g of fibre and 9g of protein
Per serving. I am a university student; I can either have my text books or fresh produce and good meat.
Toiletries and cleaning supplies can really eat up a grocery budget. I now make my own laundry soap and I clean my house with non-chemical cleaners. I use vinegar and baking soda for most things and vinegar is amazing! My windows and floors sparkle. I also make my own deodorant from coconut oil and baking soda. I love it and it's so cheap. You can google recipes for making all your cleaning supplies and you'll be amazed at how much you save. (And you'll be healthier also!)
I have the ultimate EASY hypoallergenic homemade laundry detergent. If I wasn't needing to keep things as pure as possible, I'd just buy Sun brand or whatever else was super cheap. They work as well as Tide, etc. I use stain remover regardless. The small amount I need doesn't seem to bother sensitive skin.
Get a box of washing soda, borax and baking soda (walmart has big boxes if baking soda right in the laundry aisle, but i buy mine at aldis as u go there anyway, cheaper). Either mix the washing soda & borax together in a container, cup for cup or measure it out each time you do wash. Add baking soda to each load also, or mix half a cup baking soda per cup of washing soda/borax. IE if you mix up 4 cups washing soda and 4 cups borax and want to add in the baking soda, mix in 2cups of it.
NO PREP, no "goo", no 18 steps and using the kitchen appliances.
I also use citric acid for brights/whites. I buy it on amazon. I do only about 1 load a week of brights so the bags lasting me FOREVER. You could use lemonade koolaid too if it's cheaper. I use 1/2T citric acid per large load.
I do not mix the ingredients together at all, becuz I'm OCD lol. I measure them per load. I have found 1/2T baking soda does a large load (it's just for smells, so you could leave it out or go up to 1T per load if needed for super stinky stuff). I use 1T each washing soda and borax for large loads. I only wash large loads. I was using 1 1/2T each and read recently a recipe that only uses 2TSP combined per load! That's all 3 ingredients...I cut back to 1T each and it's fine. I don't think I'll go lower. It's pretty cheap :)
Also, I add 1T of soap per load...I use a cheapo detergent right now but for super sensitive skin, use 1T Dr. Bronner's. I can barely afford to use that as bath soap (and I dilute it in half already) so I don't use it currently as laundry soap. Most recipes I've seen do not call for this soap addition. It makes sense to me tho so I add it in.
You can get pretty jars to store your ingredients or mixture in and print up cute labels. I use containers I got as food products originally and take my permanent marker to the front. I'm that cheap lol
I've used this for months now; my clothes are definitely all rinsed out of detergent from when I was using actual detergent. They still get clean so it's not the residue cleaning them as some scoffers claim.
Hi, I came here via Pinterest and wanted to drop by to say these are great tips!
I follow all of these except one: meal plan - I never end up cooking what I plan, because most of my food depends on my mood. And because of that I used to buy too many vegetables, in case I felt like cooking any of those. Most of the times half of the vegetables would rot, having me throw 'em away. That is one thing I have stopped - now I buy limited produce and variety each week, and try to get creative with the less quantities and choice (I was born a vegetarian).
I have learned how to store the groceries well and keeping track of expiry dates, so now I shop on alternative weekends only. And my grocery bill per month is in fact less than $150 per month I'm sure!
Also, I totally agree with # 2 ... Stuff that has a long shelf life is worth stocking up on especially if bought on sales/discounts. Wish someone could make my husband understand that! :D