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How to squeeze $500 out of your monthly budget

Posted Jul 01 2008, 02:46 PM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from partner blog ConsumerAffairs.com.

When large corporations face tough times, they often hire "efficiency experts" who come in and tell them how to save money. Households, struggling under the strain of higher gasoline prices, could use the same kind of service right about now.

Playing the role of an efficiency expert, Consumer Reports magazine says it has looked for and found ways for the average consumer household to trim up to $500 a month from its budget. Even at $4 a gallon, that buys a lot of gas.

The key is focusing on a budget's fixed monthly costs. These are the checks we write every month without thinking much about it: the cell phone, the cable TV bill, insurance for home and car, and other services that we need and shouldn't be expected to do without. The key, say CR's financial planners, is to find cheaper versions.

"It's surprising that there are so many savings opportunities hidden in your budget," said Jeff Blyskal, senior editor at Consumer Reports. "You don't have to radically change your life to save $500 a month."

Savings shown are Consumer Reports Money Lab estimates based on what a range of consumers really spend and can possibly save. Actual savings will depend on individual circumstances.

Find cheaper car insurance for an average monthly savings of $65. Annual surveys of CR readers have shown that many have stayed with the same auto insurer for 15 years. Depending on people's profiles and where they live, they might be able to save hundreds a month by shopping around. For example, a married couple without violations or accidents but with a driving-age son in Los Angeles can save $380 per month on standard coverage by switching to a lower-cost auto insurer.

How to do it: Start at the National Association of Insurance Commissioners Web site, and click on "NAIC States & Jurisdictions" to find your state's insurance department. Most provide comparative premium quotes based on standard customer profiles.

Optimize your life insurance for an average monthly savings of $110. Life insurance premiums have dropped so dramatically since the 1990s, it will probably pay for you to replace a policy bought years ago with a comparable new one. A $500,000 20-year guaranteed level term from Prudential, for example, would have cost a 50-year-old man about $2,125 a year in 1998. Today the same guy, now 60, could pay Prudential $1,385 a year for the same coverage over the next 10 years, saving $60 a month.

How to do it: Get premium quotes at Accuquote and LifeInsure.com. Don't cancel your existing policy until you have a new one already in place.

Shop smart for food for an average monthly savings of $200. Making different choices in the supermarket and when eating out can net monthly savings from $130 to $255. The average family of four can chop its grocery bill by $190 a month by shifting to a lower-cost mix of foods.

How to do it: Plan menus around sales of fresh poultry, fish, meat, dairy and produce, and make use of leftovers. Avoid costly prepared meals. Eat more low-priced high-nutrition foods like beans and potatoes. Try less expensive store brands, and sign up for store discount cards.

Eliminate bank fees for an average monthly savings of $25. Banks collected some $39 billion in account fees and penalties last year. That works out to an average of $28 per month per household. But with some planning, you can pay zero.

How to do it: Bank at large institutions with lots of ATMs in convenient locations. Shop for free checking, and strictly adhere to provisions for a minimum balance, direct deposit or other conditions to avoid monthly fees.

Find a better calling plan for an average monthly savings of $35. When CR's experts examined real phone bills, they uncovered savings from $15 a month for budget callers to $55 per month for heavy users.

How to do it: Peruse your last few months' phone bills to assess how many minutes you typically use on landline and wireless calls. Comparison shop among cellular-service providers, the local phone company, and your cable TV company. Don't buy more than you need, such as an unlimited cellular plan if you rarely go over 900 minutes per month.

Pay off your credit card for an average monthly savings of $65. On average, consumers who carry a balance owe $2,200, on which they pay 15.2% in annual interest charges. Eliminate that and save $28 per month. Some 15% of consumers carry balances of $10,000 or more; they can save $125 per month by paying off their debt.

How to do it: Stop charging, then pay more than the minimum required each month until it's paid off. Dig up cash for this from your U.S. Treasury stimulus check, garage sales, or extra part-time work.

Other articles of interest at ConsumerAffairs.com:

'Food frauds' rip off consumers, group charges

What's really fueling those sky-high oil prices?

Hypermiling is dangerous, says AAA

Comments

 

I HAVE ALREADY BEEN DOING ALL OF THESE THINGS FOR THE PAST 7 YEARS, SO NOW WHAT. I AM BEARLY GETTING BY WHILE DOING THESE THINGS, AND GAS PRICES HAVE CRIPPLED MY FAMILY. WE ARE SO BEHIND IN ALL OUR BILLS BECAUSE WE HAVE TO GET GAS, SO WE CAN GET TO WORK TO MAKE MONEY TO BE ABLE TO GET GAS TO GET TO WORK EVERYDAY.

If you must eat outcaue of work go to places that offer free refils or drink water saves you quater of your bill by drinking water most places you can sit down and get a good meal for 5-7 dollars then drink cost 1/29-2.50 that is a full 1/4 on top of your meal!

The above is a way to start it does not help you get a savings of 500.00 a month!

people that have 10,000 on credit cards got there for one of two reasons! one they spend to much or two they had some kind of set back and now they cant get out of it!

what there needs to be is a bank that helps people that need  help and that still have they capablitlies of paying there bebt off.  not a bank that only offers credit to those of 650-710 credit score  what about the 635 credit score people where can they go

think about it ony riich are helped all the time!

I could add some to this...look for stores that have discount cards for gas. We have been saving $50 per month by buying at Giant Eagle. We can get gift cards there if we wish to make purchases at restaurants, Sears, Kohls, and many, many other places. You get .20 cents per gallon for every $50 spent.

Look for Angel Food Ministries. For $30 you can get $60-$70 worth of food (good food, brand names, excellent quality) for $30 per month.

Shop Farmer's Markets for fresh produce, no middleman and thus lower prices with better quality.

Shop second hand stores for clothing...be careful and you might find some good buys. Or, shop stores such as TJ Max for excellent clothing buys.

Make sure you take advantage of all discounts. We recently purchased a refrigerator and got the delivery fee of $70 back by going to a little extra effort to file for it.

Learn how to use up leftovers. Some people won't eat them, they need to learn not to waste food.

I used to hve all the movie channels.  Now, I just have the basic cable and showtime and HBO--saves me $35 per month.  I bought Apple TV for my music storage and if I can't find something on TV, I just rent a movie for $2.99 or $3.99 each, which I do maybe twice per month.  Or, I go to the library and get a movie and updoad it to Apple and watch it that way.  I may just cancel HBO and showtime because I can purchase those shows for $1.99 each if I want to.  I would save another $25.

This is fine for big spenders,how about we who are already doing all of these things to conserve our funds??  We need help too!!!! retirees on fixed income etc

Turn off lights when leaving a room and when watching TV.

Yeah, that was my take on this as well. The easy stuff is easily done, and the "don't pay interest" was pretty much a no-brainer. But, come on, if there is a balance, paying it off won't remove it  from the bottom line as easily as cutting cable or changing your calling plan.

Looks good on paper....but not reality.....first consider what to give up or do with out, yard service, water service, bi-monthly nail and hair appointments, any other personal service, then go from there.  Bottom line....correction takes time....don't expect overnight, by the end of week/month or even 6 months....takes commitment and time.

It always amazes me how people will read an article like this, get angry or self rightous and say "but I can already run, you were supposed to tell me how to fly! Articles like this are for those who have been walking or crawling. Lets appriciate that those who know how to run have taken time to write this article to help others run with us. And don't worry, the person that finally does learn how to fly will make a mint teaching the rest of us.

How am I suppose to do this, my family, is my husband, 4 young children and myself.  One is working, and the other stays home.  We both have a good head on your shoulder and want to save money, but no matter what we deep into it for some reason.  We dont send our kids to daycare they are raised by us, but yet its a struggle.  We dont make that much, with 4 kids and an income of if we're lucky of $1800 a month, sucks.  We want to save but how.  We are dont have credit cards, cable bills, I mean we live cheap already, what else is there?

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