I will spare you all the boring details about things we did
wrong at first like cutting all the coupons out the weekly circulars and coupon
books then putting them in sorters…..ugghhh the LONG…very LONG hours of doing so
still makes me cringe and I will concentrate on what we have learned. I hope it
will help you all save money. I am going to make it clear first, we are NO
WHERE CLOSE to the people on Extreme Couponing. Some of those people would buy
thousands of dollars worth of groceries and only pay like 3 bucks…we aren’t
that good. But, we do proudly save between 50 to 75% on our big weekly shopping
trips…we did once have a very exciting trip that we saved 86% of our total bill
at the grocery store. I think I leapt for joy when I got home…lol Anyways, here
we go…
·
First and foremost, treat EVERY coupon as if it
is cash. If you get that mindset in your head you will find more value in
actually using them.
·
Don’t feel awkward or embarrassed when you
decide to actually coupon. I had to get over it myself. I felt as if I was trying to pull one over on the store I shopped at and not what the truth about couponing was. Truth is: Manufacturers want you to shop their products...that's the whole purpose of those coupons in the first place. You are doing NOTHING WRONG by using them. And though that person behind the register may feel annoyed at the time having to scan all your coupons, the store itself BEGS for those coupons they receive from us customers... The more coupons that come from the stores back to the manufactures brings bigger deals in the long run when they join together to match store and manufacturer's coupons. More deals...means more customers...means more cash!
·
Buy multiple newspapers. We buy at least two
every Sunday, and then my husband has friends at work that give us coupon books they don't use from home which makes it so easy to buy items in bulk.
·
Don’t cut any coupons out! Read the next one to
understand why.
·
Use the web…the internet is a Couponer’s best
friend. There are sooooo many websites that are out there that will help you
match the weekly circular ads to currently active coupons. We found an AMAZING
website we use to help us along called Southern Savers. It does a lot of the
leg work for you; which is really nice being a mom of 4 busy busy children. That
particular website I mentioned above will let you know what the sales price is
of a product, where to get the coupon from be it from a webpage, SS (Smart Source) or RP
(Red Plum) then it gives the date of when it was published (located on the
spine of the outside cover of your coupon books you receive in the newspaper
each week) AND what the end cost should be after all applied coupons. So you
want those coupon books intact and we use filing cabinet folders to organize them in order of publish dates for easy reading. It makes it sooo much easier to find the right coupon for the specific deal THEN clip/cut the coupon out of the coupon books. Clipping every coupon out of the books and putting them in individual sorters is such a pain! Having the coupon books intact also makes it easier to purge outdated coupon books and the coupons you didn't use as they expire. Southern Savers even has a built in shopping
list to aid you in-store. So do your research and try to find a local coupon matching website for your area.
·
Have a
working printer. Sooooo many manufacturers are now viral. They have their own
webpages, facebook pages and even twitter accounts that will post coupons from
time to time that you need to print off. Also, SmartSource.com, RedPlum.com,
Coupons.com and Groupon.com offer printable coupons as well. You can usually
print two per coupon if you click the back button 3 times in your browser after
the first one prints.
·
Try your hardest to stack coupons. What I mean
by that is you can use both a manufacturer’s coupon and a store coupon at the
same time on any 1 or multiple items depending on the wording on each coupon.
·
We learned to make meals out of deals. We build
our menu for the week AFTER we have made our shopping list with coupons. Then
and ONLY then do we add things that aren’t on sale to the shopping list if we
need something to complete a particular meal. If you get good at buying in bulk
you will find the longer you coupon the more likely you have those items
already in your pantry saving you even more money.
·
If your local grocery store has a reward card
program, don’t let them scan your card first before ringing up your purchases
and using all your coupons. Some manufacturer’s coupons won’t work along with a
big sale item. For some reason though, if you have scanned both the groceries
and all the coupons THEN have them scan the reward card it works. A computer
system thing I believe. Plus, it is REALLY fun to watch those last few dollars
saved beep…beep…beep off of your total amount too. Gives me a bit of a rush
actually.
· Be careful of misleading coupons!!! Read the coupon’s fine print!!!! Sometimes the
pictures on the coupons don’t match the product to which you are supposed to
buy.
·
Make notes on our shopping list which tells you
exactly what amount you can buy so there are no mix-ups at the counter which can
make things soooo chaotic especially if you are buying bulk items. So if you
have two coupons for the same product that states: $1.00 of 3 (insert product
name) … you need to mark on your shopping list the number 6.
·
And lastly, have fun with it. We include our
children in it. We all sit down together after I compile our shopping list and find the coupons on our list, we really have a good time with it. It doesn’t hurt that the kiddlets are learning that
money doesn’t grow on trees and how to honor a dollar as well. My 5 year old
son already knows how to read and count money and will tell us if he thinks
something is a good deal or if it is too expensive and YES he uses the word
expensive...lol My 11 year old is our best coupon finder. When our list says we
need to find a particular coupon published on a particular date he rocks at
finding them. My 13 year old is a whiz at locating an item in the grocery store and my
4 year old daughter sits in the cart and organizes the groceries so it is WAY
easier to scan…she’s my sorter.
We are still a work in progress, but we are progressing towards Extreme Couponing. Don't know if I will ever pay only 3 bucks for $1000 worth of groceries.... but, it sure is fun trying!
3 comments:
Way to go Christie! It just seems like there's so much to it. I've joined all the reward programs at our local stores and made sure we were signed up for weekily mailing/circulars. I'm slowly progressing and hope to have it down like you and your family soon.
This is do great advice! I've watched the show Extreme Couponing but have found it a bit overwhelming to tackle. Your tips make it seem totally doable! Thanks!!
Thank you both. With 4 children we had to find a way to make it simple and easy. One thing I did fail to mention... if you are a warehouse store shopper like, BJ's, Sam's or Costco... there is an added tip! You can use multiple coupons on one packaged product at the warehouse clubs. You know how they have like 4 shampoos bundled together? Well, you can use 4 coupons. Just something I thought about while driving today and thought I'd share!
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