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Frugal confession: I cut my own hair

Posted Oct 17 2007, 10:22 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from partner blog Five Cent Nickel.

On the heels of my confession that we take our own treats to the movie theater instead of buying them at the snack bar, I thought I’d throw out another one: I cut my own hair.

I’ve been doing it for at least 10 years. I don't have special skills in this area. I simply give myself periodic "buzz cuts" with inexpensive clippers. My current weapon of choice is a  Remington Precision haircut kit I picked up at Wal-Mart for less than $20 a couple years ago.

I buy new clippers every three or four years, so it costs me a grand total of about $7 a year. In return for this minor investment, I save myself the expense of 12 to 15 haircuts per year. Splitting the difference, and assuming $12 a haircut, including tax and tip, that works out to $162 per year, or $155 after factoring in the cost of the clippers.

Extrapolating over a decade, this turns into a nice little chunk of change.

On top of this, we buzz our kids’ hair in the summer. With four kids getting summer cuts, we’re saving the cost of another 16 or so haircuts per year. That works out to additional savings of $192 a year.

While the savings are substantial, I have to admit that the biggest reason I do this is to save time.

That being said, I’d be doing you a disservice if I didn’t do the usual personal-finance thing and extrapolate these savings out through retirement. So let’s have a little fun with compounding interest.

Let's assume that:

  • I continue cutting my own hair for the next 30 years (at which point I’ll be 65 years old).

  • I keep giving my kids four summer haircuts per year until they each turn 18.

  • The cost of a haircut goes up 3% per year.

  • I can invest this money with an 8% return.

The haircuts will compound to more than $43,000 by the time I retire.

Of course, it’s unlikely my kids will subject themselves to haircuts from dear old dad through high school, but you can still see the point.

Other articles of interest at Five Cent Nickel:

"The accidental deadbeat"

"Don't be afraid to ask for a discount"

"Making sense of tax-efficient money funds"

Comments

 

wow, some really vitriolic postings about a truly great idea.  For men who can wear a simple haircut (and no, that does not equate to a "skinhead"), this can be a huge time and money saver.  Why people are so negative on it is beyond me--perhaps they are jealous of other people's willingness to take the time and effort to save money?  

For those of you who hate this--you need to read the book "The Millionaire Next Door."  Millionaires are frugal people, not spenders, and they often look it.

Its even cheaper if you're asian! I don't even have to buy clippers...I just a big bowl over my kids' heads and just use scissors to cut around it!

Some things are worth $43,000. A lifetime of good haircuts is one of them.

I want to know where he's getting an 8% return on his investments these days?  I can't even find a local CD for more than 4.1%.

I think when it comes to saving less than $10/month (as a typical gal, I only need a cut everyh three months or so), it's a question of real value.  Real value should include consideration of time, skills, enjoyability, and even potential emotional costs.

Think I'll keep clipping coupons...not my hair!

I think that works if you are caucasian or some other ethnicity where you have fairly straight hair.  Otherwise, you're better off getting some professional assistance.

I shave my head. This save me money and make my Mr. Clean costume work well. Greg Griswold New Berlin Wisconsin

This is the typical tripe that passes for "financial advice" these days. Shame on you, MSN. Asking people to make their own candy and cut their own hair is not a realistic way to get ahead financially.  There is a reason that people pay for services such as getting their hair cut; and only a few nut jobs will actually go out and do it on their own.

All actions like this do is fool yourself into believing that you're being fiscally responsible when you're really just going through esoteric motions.  

Why don't we go back to churning our own butter and hunting game to survive while we're at it?

You should not be writing a financial advice blog. You are not frugal, you are cheap. There is a difference.

I've been cutting my usually long (but sometimes short) hair for years because I am allergic to the chemicals used in beauty shops.  The Flowbee worked well until I started wearing my hair in a blunt cut -- now I do have some problems cutting it exactly even in the back, but since my hair is so curly I get away with it.  If I had actually been putting the money I have saved on haircuts into a savings account all this time, I'd have accumulated about 30 years of savings plus compounded interest.  Great idea.  Wish I'd thought of it.

Cutting your own hair could be ok  if you dont wind up looking like some creepy disgruntled postal worker and scare people half to death when they look at you! Think of the societal costs of this as well, what if we all did it that would be scary!  Anyway, I dont have time to cut my hair I am too busy trying to churn my own butter, tend to my garden, and ride around on my bicylce everywhere. I am just beat once I get back to my cabin that has no electricity, or running water in my efforts to be frugal and save for retirement oh and trying to save the earth too!! Another Idea is Sewing all your own Clothes!!! Every think of that! Thats a smart one!  

To Chris:  Although everyone is entitled to their own opinions, is it really necessary (or mature) to be name-calling?  Nut jobs?  Really?  How old are you?  Again I find myself asking a fellow human being to repeat after me . . . “to each his own”.  And although I’m a professional who would never cut his own hair, it doesn’t bother me in the slightest that someone would.  It’s their hair, their life.  Okay, so it’s not for everyone.  But why should you or anyone else care about the fact that someone else is cutting their own hair?  And what possess one to feel so judgmental about someone else’s friggin’ hair cut?  Nut job?  Uncalled for.

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