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Want to save? Join the 'Dollar Bill Challenge'

Posted Sep 22 2008, 12:04 PM by Donna Freedman
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Starting in January, Smart Spending message board reader "Pepperdoo" vowed to save all her singles. Thus far, her "Dollar Bill Challenge" has netted her $615.  The money will probably pay for vehicle insurance or a new front door, but she might also just bank it for any unforeseen expense.

Pepperdoo isn't alone. Some readers have been doing this for months, some just started, and all have progress to report. "Shadow2103" has almost $800, even after buying her daughter's college textbooks, and is dreaming of a cash-only Christmas. "Yoopergramma," age 67, is $161 closer to a trip to next year's motorcycle rally in Sturgis, S.D.

"Always..proud" saved $202, which translated into two days' worth of family fun at theme parks. "Cpstl" is up to $542, and plans to give the money to a nonprofit choral group.

One plastic-using reader didn't think the challenge was a good fit -- but after just one month, "moehenry" has $30 in hand. "For someone who uses their debit/credit card for everything, I am shocked at the amount of money that crosses my palms," the reader says. "I can't wait to see how much I have at the end of September."

More than one way to save
The challenge is simple: Set aside every dollar bill that comes your way. But it isn't necessarily limited to singles. Some readers also toss in loose change or the occasional $5, $10 or $20 bill. Most of the money comes from wallets and pockets at the end of the day, but a few folks are throwing in money made from bottle or can returns, manufacturer rebates, online auctions or yard sales.

They're stashing cash in envelopes, jars, coffee cans, change purses, 5-gallon water jugs and a giant plastic replica of a Coca-Cola bottle. Every so often, they take the money to the bank. A couple of readers reminded change-savers to roll and deposit their own coins rather than pay a premium to commercial counting machines.

Reader "Librian" recently started using the challenge to help herself kick a soda habit. "Every time I really want a soft drink at work and do not get it, I put the $1.25 in an envelope.  I now have about $12," she says.

"N-Girl," who's up to $200, has vowed to put in a dollar a day until her husband returns from Iraq. Before he left, he'd been looking at fishing gear. N-Girl may buy it for him when he gets home, or she may use the money for a weekend getaway since they didn't get to go on a honeymoon.

I might try it myself
Every night I empty my wallet of change. Quarters get set aside for laundry day. The other coins go into a piggy bank, to be wrapped and deposited every so often. Now and then I also put a few dollars into my emergency cash cache. Instead of saving paper money, I rely on automatic withdrawals from checking into an online bank each month.

However, I'm tempted to start a dollar-bill challenge of my own, if only to see how quickly I could improve that cash cache. Right now it's at $300; it would be great to have $500 on hand, in case of some kind of emergency.

One thing I'd recommend to all you dollar-bill savers is not to keep the money in the bureau. Burglars are usually only in a home for a few minutes, but one of the first things they're likely to do is empty the dresser drawers.

So make your hiding place so obscure that burglars either won't think of it or won't have time to find it. For example, it's unlikely they'll pull every item from your pantry to find the cake-mix box that holds your stash. (Especially if you, like me, have nine cake mixes.)

On the other hand, make sure your hidey-hole is not so crafty that you can't find it, either.

Addicted to ones?
The point of the challenge is that you don't miss a dollar here and a dollar there. Unless you track your spending, you're probably "losing" dollars every day. How many times have you left your house with a $20 bill and come home with $14, but couldn't quite remember how you spent the six bucks? A pack of gum, a sports drink, a magazine -- these all add up pretty quickly.

Taking the ones out of your wallet every night could make you more careful about impulse purchases. If you've got a wallet full of singles, it's easy to take one out and buy that pack of gum. But you might hesitate to break a $20 bill, or even a fiver.

Consider joining the Dollar Bill Challenge, just for a month. You might be surprised how much accumulates in that time. Beware, though: Saving ones can become "an addiction," according to Yoopergramma.

"I love the nice green feel of them, and I like the nice green smell of them. At one time I would have loved the nice green way they spend. Now I love the nice green way they save," she writes.

Incidentally, the challenge may end on Dec. 31 but it ain't over. Not for Pepperdoo, anyway.

"After that, I'll start the Five Dollar Bill Challenge," she writes. "I may just turn all my ones into fives and keep on going."

Comments

 

This is based off of something Neal Boortz has been saying on his radio show for years and works. It is in the last chapter of his book, Someone's Gotta Say It, and he gives credit to a gentleman who taught it to him. Where is some credit to these folks?

Dear Stephen,

My mother and stepfather saved for their honeymoon this way in the 1970s, and they didn't listen to talk radio. It's just a good, common-sense idea -- who knows who really "invented" it?

Thanks for reading Smart Spending.

Best regards,

Donna Freedman

Wow, yeah i'm totally digging that concept!  I've been trying to stick to my "dollar a day" challenge where i put $1 into a cup every work day, but it's hard remembering...if i could get into the habit of taking out all my $1's at home every night, that might be easier... i like it!

At my age (18 and independent from my parents) I can't afford to save whole dollars, but I do it with quarters, dime's nickels and pennies. The way I do it is every month or two or three I cash in the silver for my own savings account and every six months or so I cash in the pennies. (Which, after reading a few other articles on msn.com, I have decided to give the pennies to a charity that I like.)

I started saving a couple of months ago when I found a change jar that has a little calculator in the top so I always know the total. It also keeps me from raiding the jar, since the total won't be right. I've already cashed in $100 at my credit union and am up to nearly $50 again.  The money goes to make extra payments on my one credit card and car loan, and when those are done it'll fund the emergency account I had to nearly empty to buy the car.

A former boyfriend had a unual way to save.  Whenever he would cash his paycheck he woiuld buy $2 bills.  Since few actually use them and you usually get strange looks when you present one at a store, there wasn't much temptation to get into the stash. He also saved all the end of the day change and later would have it converted to more $2 bills.   I watched him save hundred of dollars this way.

Just an FYI: In the mid-Atlantic states, Commerce Bank (recently taken over by TD) will count your change for free. The machine counts the change, issues you a paper accounting of the total, and you take the slip to the teller. Then, they will either hand you the cash in bills (and change) or you can directly deposit it in your bank account. My husband and I fill a particular glass jar with change, then take it to the bank. We usually average $80 a jar.

My wife works at a grocery store, as a cashier/customer service, so she handles alot of money everyday.  I have always saved everything special form 50 cent coins to $2 bills. Also any of the bills with blue or red ink.  I do it so much that my wife has caught on and will actually buy them from her store. So far by doing this, we have well over $400 in non-common coins and bills...just a way to save a few bucks...hope i never have to cash them in though.

Great idea! I just started the five dollar challenge today. Had six in my wallet. Maybe I'll buy a car.

I used this method of saving while attending college and working in a restaurant. Every shift worked, I would bring home the least amount of singles possible and put them in a show box. For example, if I made $68, I would bring home 3 twenties, 1 five and 3 singles. I would put the 3 singles in the show box. I usually saved around $80 a month and would use the savings for textbooks, etc. This method of saving was successful for me because I used to carry singles in my wallet all the time. When I had a couple extra ones laying around, it would lead me to buy an occasional lotto ticket, a coke from the vending machine, or a candy bar from the gas station. Instead I saved a little extra money every month and kept me away from the unnecessary sodas and junk food.

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