Sunday, July 19, 2009

The Lazy Way to Save on Groceries

It's Sunday, time to relax and be lazy. Enjoy a leisurely breakfast, then lounge on the chaise lounger, prop your feet, read the Sunday paper with the cat or dog curled on your lap--but you forgot the scissors to cut the circular coupons! Oh no. Solution: Skip the coupons.

Blog Sisters came across the following article from our favorite dummy-proof, investment advisor--Motley Fool. These are practical tips that will save time. Clipping coupons is good for specific brands that you feel make a difference in your cooking, cleaning or household chore. In reality even brands on sale and with coupons can often be more expensive than store labels. How do you know? CHECK THE PRICING LABEL that indicates Price per ounce or pound. We both followed these tips when there was no time for coupon-clipping or spending an hour at groceries. It's in and out with our list. That's the other secret--have a shopping list.

In conclusion, we would disagree with Motley Fool that these tips are the lazy way. In fact, we consider this approach the smarter way. Less time clipping and calculating and still save more money and time in the end!

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By Dayana Yochim:

If you're not moved much by the effort-to-payoff ratio of comparison-shopping and coupon-clipping (guilty!), this article is for you. Put down your scissors and recycle those Sunday circulars. Don't even bother trying to figure out how to get the calculator on your cell phone to work while you're navigating the supermarket aisles. Even sloths like me can save money on groceries with minimal-to-no pre-shopping preparation.

Incorporate a few of the following low-effort money-saving tricks into your routine, and you can smugly skip over every other "Ways to Save on Groceries" article you see.

Let your grocer do the math [Blog Sisters: this is our favorite tip]
You've got a cheat sheet at your disposal in every aisle: Use it. It's that per-unit pricing sticker on the edge of the shelf. Pay attention to that little label, and you've got a simple and instant savings strategy -- one that's a lot easier than coming up with a coupon-filing system. There you'll discover that you'll pay $20 less for the same amount of soda if you buy six two-liter bottles at $5, instead of a bunch of $1.09 single servings. Don't assume that bigger is always better, though: The jumbo box of cereal is no bargain when it costs $0.08 more per pound.

Dust off your cutting board
A while back, Consumer Reports sent two shoppers to the supermarket for the weekly basics. The one schooled on the cost of convenience rang up a tab that was $79 less. Cut your grocery tab in half by avoiding pre-chopped, pre-sorted, single-serving conveniently packaged foods. The biggest bargain busters: bagged veggies ($11 v. $3 for au natural broccoli bunches), single-serving containers ($9.90 for oatmeal envelopes v. $1.59 for the canister) and pre-sliced cheese ($2 more per pound).

Stop stocking your pantry with status brands
You already know that you can save money by buying the generic (or "private label") version of a product. But exactly how much moolah are we talking? You can cut your supermarket tab by a third or more by choosing no-name brands. Be sure to look high and low in the aisles -- companies pay for prime, eye-level placement. (Generics will be up high or down low.)
As for taste? Get over it: ShopSmart found that all of the 65 store-label products it tested were at least as good as the brand-name grub. In most instances, shoppers couldn't tell a difference, or actually preferred the no-name vittles to the swankier fare. (The one exception: peanut butter.)

Buy only what's on your grocery list [Blog Sisters: we would add not to bring the kids whenever possible; most impulse purchases come from kids grabbing items from the shelves due to the pretty graphics and colors]
Duh. But, honestly, when's the last time you resisted tossing an impulse purchase or two in your shopping cart? You're not the only one: An estimated 60% to 70% of supermarket purchases are unplanned. Of course, sticking to a list requires actually making a shopping list. Would you do that for $112? That's how much the average household would save in a month if they simply purchased only the items they intended to buy before they parked the car.

Be a more discerning health-food snob
But for more serious cash conservation, scrutinize the high-end health- and enviro-conscious goods in your cart. To cut corners, stick with the conventional, non-organic (aka "cheaper") varieties of bananas, avocados, asparagus, and cauliflower, which have fewer pesticides than other fresh products. (And because testing on seafood isn't standardized, you can skip the organic fish, too.) For apples, nectarines, peaches, pears, tomatoes, spinach, strawberries, baby food, meat, and chicken, the organic versions are usually worth the higher price tags. (Go to foodnews.org for a wallet guide to pesticides in produce.)

Stop feeding the trash scavengers
In 2007, the average household spent about $3,300 on groceries -- closer to $5,000 annually for families -- and tosses 14% of it. That's $38.50 down the disposal each month -- $462 a year. (Families waste an average of $58.30 a month, or almost $700 annually.) Here again, you'll save big if you simply shop with a list (I know, I know, that seems like work) and avoid overbuying. If you have standard meals in rotation, type out all the staples needed to make the meals, and keep a stack of copies in your pantry. Before you set off to the store, simply checkmark the stuff you actually need.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for these tips! A link to your blog and to this post will be in the next issue of Parenting News You Can Use, the free weekly e-zine from the International Network for Children and Families, so we can spread the word about you! If you would like to subscribe, please visit www.WholeHeartedParenting.com. Thanks again!

Maggie Macaulay, MS Ed