Okay ladies! Between baby items, food, classes, maternity clothes- we have many discussions on how to spend money but any tips on what you guys are doing to save money (long term)? My maternity leave is not so great, unpaid, and I am trying my hardest to save,save, save but between preparing for baby girl and the normal living expenses it's seems to be flying by and I don't have as much as I want saved up!
Re: Saving money?
I also haven't bought much maternity or baby clothes- nearly all hand-me-downs from a mommy group. It's saved us a lot, too.
Look into budget billing for your utilities. We have Ameren in Missouri and the bill stays the same every month- no surprises! They do a small adjustment every 6 months to keep it fair and ours only went up $7 (its $112 for our whole house!). And I've called our cell phone and cable providers to negotiate plans to save some, too. Sprint took $60 off each month after changing to a different plan that made more sense and we get alerts if we get close to going over for data.
Important. If no money left in the monthly Mint expenses budget then can't buy anything extra! I have it really detailed out by category for utilities/bills, car, house, gas, restaurants, groceries, pets, insurance, shopping/entertainment, personal care, and so on. You hook up all your accounts and set a budget for each thing and it categorizes. Weekly go on to make sure it categorizes correctly. It's really fab and would def recommend. Nice seeing all your accounts in one place and knowing exactly what you have to work with! If you go over in one category saying shopping then you know you have to eat out less etc. If you need any other help/advice feel free to ask!
We also have direct deposit into savings by our bank, so that there is no temptation not to save that money and spend it on something else that has come up.
So I sit down every Sunday with the store ads and I plan all the meals for the week based on what's on sale. I only stock up if its an amazing deal too good to pass up. Otherwise I don't buy something just because it's on sale. I stick to what we need for our meals & try to use ingredients several ways. I use coupons, cartwheel, and cash back apps (checkout51 & ibotta).
Dave's plan can be a bit of a shock to the system at first, but it has worked for SO many families. It's based on baby steps (save $500-1000 for emergency savings, then pay off all debt, then build a 3-6 month emergency savings fund, start retirement, etc.) as well as principles like not having a credit card and taking out cash to use for many categories rather than using a debit card. (Spending cash activates the pain center of the brain in a way that useing a debit card doesn't. The result? Since parting with Uncle Benjamin hurts more than swiping even a debit card, you decide to keep more in your pocket and save!)
Many people get out of debt and begin seriously funding retirement and kids' college all within a few years on his program. Talking about paying down thousands in debt so you don't give the creditors and banks your money, but keep it and make it WORK for you. Dave advises expecting couples to save as much as possible before baby rather than pay off debt, that way you have money to cover any unexpected medical biils, then he would say attack the debt, starting with the smallest one.
That's a lot...look him up online or PM me if you want more details!
For baby, I recognize I will probably buy most of the bigger ticket items like the travel system, but beyond that I will wait to buy much of anything until after my shower. I have already gotten a bunch of clothes. Not even registering for blankets or clothes really because they come out the woodwork! After the shower if I need remaining items I may look into secondhand.
I don't use cash a lot bc categorizing expenses is easier with using card though.