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How To Save Money On Groceries Without Coupons

How to Save Money on Groceries Without Clipping a Single Coupon

The number one money-saving tip people search for on Google is "how to save money on groceries." Of course it is, food is one of the few things you need to survive and eating at home is way cheaper than eating out. But it’s also easy to go to the grocery store unprepared and walk out with way more than you can realistically eat. That’s why saving money on groceries is an easy way to drastically cut your spending, pay off debt, and reach your financial goals faster. If you like this topic I cover this and much more in…

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How to Make $27K by Eating out Less

When I think about places where money goes to die it’s not into fixer upper houses or trips across the globe, it’s everyday stuff. Stuff that in the moment I think I need then a few hours later I wonder why it was such a big deal. There’s nothing wrong about these purchases, it’s just that over time they add up. And this year, we’ve crossed the line. Americans now spend more at bars and restaurants than on groceries. A few billion dollars more.  And millennials spend more than any other generation. Millennials (ages 20-34) are now America’s largest generation making…

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Eat Out Less

A Month of Dinner Recipes for Families on a Budget

Growing up I did not have a Suzy Homemaker mother who taught me my grandmother’s secret dinner recipes or how to separate the yolk from the egg white. The extent of my cooking experience came from the instructions on the back of the Chicken Voila bag in the freezer section. In college, I became a vegetarian but I was more than satisfied eating dinners of Steam-in-Bag vegetables and fake meat corn dogs (honestly better than real corn dogs.) But when I got married and we decided to pay off our debt I knew I had to learn my way around…

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Start Meal Planning

How to Start Meal Planning When You Have No Clue Where to Start

It used to be, when we made our budget at the end of the month, groceries and restaurants were always the highest of our discretionary expenses. Like, embarrassingly highest. Now they're still a bulk of our spending but not nearly what they were. And that's thanks to meal planning.  When we were paying off our student loans, putting all of my salary and then some toward debt, we got our grocery budget to an impressive $50 per week and spent less than $100 on eating out for the month. That's because I was strategic in meal planning. How to Start…

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