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Coffee for 99 cents a pound? It's no java jive

Posted Nov 26 2007, 12:37 PM by Donna Freedman
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Yesterday I bought a pound of Starbucks coffee for just 99 cents.

You, too, can get super-cheap brew, either for gift-giving or for your own frugal morning buzz. All you need is some empty inkjet print cartridges and proximity to a Staples or Office Max.

Both businesses give $3 in store credit for each ink cartridge; certain brands are not accepted, so check each company's rules. The stores where I live let me use up to three credits, or $9 worth, per transaction. Both sell a number of holiday gift items: hoity-toity chocolates, fancy cookies, and specialty coffees, teas and flavored cocoas.

Over the weekend I shopped for art supplies for a community gift program. At Staples, I noticed the coffee cost $9.99.
I handed over three cartridges and a buck, and walked out with a penny in change and a pound of java.

Had I been at Office Max, the brew would have been from another hometown brand, Seattle's Best Coffee.

Jitter bells
This is a frugalist's dream: nearly free gifts, or nearly free morning mochas!

So save those spent cartridges, and start looking for more. Does your workplace use inkjet printers? How about your kid's school or your church/synagogue/mosque?

Ask your friends for their empties. Put a note on a community bulletin board or place an ad on Craigslist offering to "recycle" cartridges. (Be careful not to burn $2.50 worth of gas to get a $3 store credit.)

Or make this a project for your Scout or youth group: Have the kids collect cartridges and "buy" coffee for a homeless shelter, group home or senior center.

To thine ownself give brew
And if money is especially tight right now? Buy yourself some Starbucks or SBC. Collect enough cartridges and you could wind up with caffeine for months.

I'm not a coffee fan myself; the bag I bought will go in a gift basket. But I know how important a cuppa joe can be, especially if you've foregone other luxuries.

Ninety-nine cents for a pound of quality java is a screamin' deal, so invest in coffee futures.

And if you, too, aren't a coffee fan? There are always the Ferrero Rocher chocolates.

 

Comments

 

Office Depot does the same kind of thing for cartridges brought in.  I haven't looked to see what kind of coffee they carry but it might be worth looking into.

I think the coffee for .99 a pound is fantastic, I give gift baskets to some of my unfortunate neighbors and family members who other wise can not afford good coffee such as Starbucks,  I hope the stores in my area particapate?

Not all ink cartridges are accepted for the $3 credit any more...must be certain name brands. Found out the hard way.

Did you know you can also send used cartridges to Food for the Poor and feed 80 kids with one cartridge? Look on their web site. I have been doing it for years.  Seems like an even better thing to do!

LOL thats a really good idea =]

Feed some hungry people instead...

www.foodforthepoor.org/.../Recycling_For_The_Poor.htm

LOL! Maybe your church/synagogue/mosque recycles their own cartridges and puts the money back to savings for the company! People can be frugal but not jerks

This very true about being able to use upto 3 cartriages at a time. I do it all the time at both Staples and Office Max.  Since this program started I have never bought a ream of paper again because if you don't want a discount you can get a ream of there brand of paper, and it is really good paper.

They mentioned getting cartridges from schools, churches etc. I bring my empties so that the school can get the credit.

They are 16-ounce bags; I checked.

The stores in my area allow three cartridges per transaction; not sure why some stores don't.

Finally, please note that Starbucks did NOT refuse to send products to soldiers because the company does not support the war. That is an urban legend. For more on the subject, visit http://www.snopes.com.

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