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9 coupon myths exposed for what they are

Posted May 28 2008, 06:52 PM by Karen Datko
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Guest blogger Jody Connelly takes aim at nine myths about coupons and blows each one out of the water in an excellent post at Money Saving Mom, an authoritative coupon site.

We know you've all heard this one: "Coupons are only for unhealthful processed junk foods." Yes, Jody says, a lot of coupons are for foods that aren't good for you. "However," she says, "there are just as many coupons for good healthful foods" -- like fresh produce, frozen veggies and yogurt.

(Kris at Cheap Healthy Good, who alerted readers to Jody's post, seconds that thought with her own post about how to eat healthy with the help of coupons. "Sure, some folks have the time and inclination to brew their own soy sauce from scratch, and more power to them. I don't," Kris writes. "Fortunately for me, a plethora of standard condiments and cupboard stalwarts appear quite regularly in coupon inserts.")

Also on Jody's myth list: "Only poor people use coupons." Actually, she says, lower-income people are less likely to use coupons than middle-income people with college degrees.

"Generic is always cheaper" is another myth if you match your coupon with a store sale on the name-brand item, Jody says. Plus, Kris notes at Cheap Healthy Good, sometimes generic kitchen supplies aren't very good. She writes, "I don't know if you've ever bought generic plastic wrap, but in my experience, it's slightly less worthless than a Paris Hilton math book." (Kris, we have, and it is.)

Some people think coupons aren't worth the effort if your local stores don't offer double coupons. But Jody knows how to work the deals at CVS and other drugstores that don't double coupons but do offer in-store deals, rebates and other amazing ways to save money. Remember that when you're using coupons, the trick is to match them with sales.

Bloggers often advise us to clip coupons only for things we normally eat. However, Jody says, you might be depriving yourself of some culinary delights you thought were beyond your budget. Plus, you can always swap the cat food coupons with your neighbor for coupons you can really use. 

Another myth is that it's not worth the effort to shop at multiple stores. Jody says, "For instance, if you are able to get $100 worth of product you need for $20 and you only spent $6 extra in gas and an additional 20 minutes, then I would say that would certainly be worth it."

Comments

 

My 9yr old was fliping thru a toys  catalog making his christmas list an addin up what I needed to spend and at his conclusion he ran across some coupons to help sav money when he figure in the coupon he came up with we would half to spend more money to use the store coupon.I quit cliping after his conclusion

Robin, with the money you've saved on punctuation and spell-checking, I am amazed you need to read this money-saving blog.

I've never been particularly religious about using coupons, but am doing so more and more to help offset other expenses (Fill your oil tank lately? Oy!). I'm proud to say that I knocked $40.02 off my monthly $185 grocery run last night and, other than the BOGO for the Dove candies I just gave my staff as a treat, there was nary a junk food item in sight, nor anything I didn't have on my list already. Also, the grocery store had on the back of its receipt a coupon for $0.10 off per gallon of gas on my next fill up. What a nice surprise!

Are you kidding me?  I have never, in my entire life, seen a coupon for fresh produce.  Has anyone else?

A Harris Teeter recently opened right near my apartment building.  I joined their VIC program, and just by using my card, I can save on selected items, including produce. And it isn't much, but Whole Foods gives you 5 cents back for using your own bag.  I wish more grocery stores would do that.

Most of the coupons in my Sunday supplement are for things I never use (I'm vegan), so I don't really clip much.

I've been doing coupons for 3 years, just last year alone I saved 2,500.00 dollars on items. At first I didn't think I was saving either until I saved all my receipts and added them up, wow ,you really see that sunday coupon clipping is worth it and its kind of a relaxing activitiy.  My teen boys are huge coupon shoppers, if its not on the list or on a coupon they ususally don't ask or buy it. Yes Robin some coupons aren't worth it but most are and a little quick math in the store results in great savings. have fun in the coupon world.

Ann, SuperTarget often has coupons for fresh produce which makes it free or almost free when paired with sales. Just recently, you could get free celery--as many bunches as you'd like--for free by pairing the $1/1 Target coupon (printable off their website) with the $1/bunch sale. A few months back, it was the same deal with cauliflower and broccoli heads.

This is just one such example of produce coupons; there are many other examples I could cite. Fresh produce coupons are usually store coupons rather than manufacturer's coupons (though there are occasionally manufacturer's coupons for produce, but it is usually bagged salads and frozen veggies and fruit, etc.), but they are out there.

When you start learning about how coupons and bargain-shopping works, a whole new world of savings opens up! And no matter what your dietary restrictions or preferences are, there are usually many ways you can save more by becoming a more educated, bargain-savvy shopper.

(Thanks for the link, Karen!)

-Money Saving Mom

Ann, the only time I've seen coupons for fresh produce is only when its combined with another product, such as free bananas when you buy a certain brand of cereal.  

Robin, you're...I don't like to name call, but you're an idiot.  Not all coupons require you to buy more than you need in order to get the discount and if you don't need it then don't use it, but to stop cutting coupons on the expert advice of a 9 year old, well that's just stupid.

Since my local paper has been delivering to my house by mistake for the last couple of months (I've called them 3 times to correct this), I have been taking advantage of the coupons.  I have 2 dogs so the coupons come in real handy.

Ann, this year I've seen a couple coupons for produce--free lettuce with a certain brand of bread (which is $3/loaf, but it's one of the few that's dairy free), and clementine oranges, off the top of my head. But very rarely, not enough to warrant buying a paper every week for coupons alone. And frozen veggie coupons tend to be for things with sauce--yuck.

I'm a vegan (no meat or eggs or dairy), and I cut maybe $3-4 of coupons out of the newspaper supplements every week. Much more lucrative are the coupons printed at the cash register, or mailed to me directly from the grocery store's incentive program (Kroger). I don't mind having my purchases tracked when they give me coupons for quite a lot off things that I actually buy  (or just money off my next shopping trip--those are even better).  

It takes a lot less time to simple have your price book memorized - so you know when something is really on sale.

No one who blogs about coupons understands the "time factor" which is the opportunity cost of coupons.

Look at how a store is laid out, you can easily find sale items w/o the use of coupons!

http://www.cheapogroovo.com

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