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The incredible $800 (a year) food and sundries budget

Posted Mar 19 2009, 07:00 PM by Karen Datko
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Erin's annual budget for food, health and beauty items, and cleaning supplies for a family of four and two dogs is $800. That food category includes occasional dining out.

We read about her budget and blog, Jane4girls $800 Annual Budget, at Frugal Dad, and wondered, how can she do that? It seemed almost beyond belief. She has three daughters -- ages 18, 11 and 10.

We now know some of her secrets -- coupons matched with sales, stockpiling, gardening, ExtraCare bucks, Swag Bucks, and the list goes on -- and they are doable. She also earns gift cards or gets them through special promotions; she never buys them "as that would defeat the purpose," she says. That's a gift card strategy that even Liz Pulliam Weston could like.

Erin deposits $800 in an online savings account, spends out-of-pocket with a credit card that earns cash back and other rewards, then transfers money to her checking account to pay the credit card bill off each month.

This is important: That online account also gets deposits. "Any money earned from surveys or rebates is added back into the budget for future use as long as the rebate was for a budget item," she writes.

Also important to note: That $800 does not include spending for the house and utilities, car, gifts and clothes.

Offering proof, she keeps a running tally of what she buys, how much she spends, and how much she saves whenever she goes to a store or restaurant. Amazingly on that budget they do eat out from time to time. Thank you, gift cards.

We initially thought, Erin must work at this full time. She says not. She looks for deals online, which saves time. She writes, "It takes me on average one hour per week to find the deals, gather coupons and make my lists." It took her three years to perfect the system.

Bonus: Her blog is also a good resource for frugal living tips and hot deals.

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Comments

 

Thank you for such a positive article on my $800 annual blog!

I spend almost 3x as much per month for a family of four and not counting the two dogs. There is no way one can purchase organic, healthy food with tons of fresh fruits and veggies and spend like this. Only if you're eating boxed garbage with tons of salt, sugar and msg, no way, no how could you feed my family the way we're accustomed to eating with the quality we're accusotmed to on that budget. And after years of cooking everything from scratch with only the best ingredients my family wouldn't touch anything else. Guess that's why the boys won't move away somewhere to go to college, they won't leave my cooking!

wow that's pretty amazing. Defiantely commendable but I don't think most families have the time nor the will power to do without impulse buys and comfort foods which will eat up into the budget.

Still that's pretty amazing, frugality rocks!

http://www.myworldtoday.co.cc

It was said she gardens though; you can't get more organic than that.

@joanna: i noticed that too, its about 50% boxed pizza and pretty much junk food for the rest. very few fruits, veggies and real juice. for two adults i spend about $500/mo on groceries alone, excluding dining out. its not cheap to eat "real" food and its a shame the only way to be cheap is to eat prepackaged crap that slightly resembles food.

No, the secret is learning how to cook and realizing your freezer is your best friend.  Too many want 'instant' meals instead of learning how to prepare food for your family.  Buy bulk in hamburger, make the burgers, the meatballs, the meatloaf, the sloppy joe's -- and freeze it.  It also cuts down on your utility bills as you're not using your oven all the time.  It also means you need to be organized and knowing what you want to prepare.  Try something like Angel Food Ministries, and oh my gosh, learn how to make pork chops like your grandma made with real mashed potatoes, or *gulp* try making a chicken casserole from scratch.  It can be done, it's just not instantaneous.  And don't give me the "I work" excuse.  There were working mothers before you who learned how to cook all this in one day and/or one night.  All it takes is organization and wanting to succeed.  Besides, you learn a new skill -- cooking, not running through the fast food window.

i live with my parents house with three mid sized dogs and my mother spends $100 every two weeks. That includes any food for the three of us, the three dogs and any body care products. We eat big meals every night that my Mom makes and im talking mashed potatoes, pork chops, green beans, desert every night. So i dont understand why you guys say its not possible.

i knopw she was getting horrible things like fresh picked grapefruit and salads, how unhealthy can you get.  do you people whine just to whine?

I've been following Erin's blog for quite some time now. You happened to browse her first page...where there is a great deal on frozen pizzas so she snaps them up while they are cheap. This does not mean her kids eat only crap food all the time. Who doesn't eat pizza every now and then? If you continue with her blog you will see that she makes round meals and gets organic, wholesome varieties of food when possible. If you follow her math, 0.18 cents per meal per person makes sense. She combines sales with coupons and other kinds of deals, so why don't you all take a look at her blog before scoffing?

Erin, thanks for the post. It was very helpful and gave me some great new ideas :) jhonka...you whine because you've got nothing better to do. How about instead of spending (what I'm sure must be) countless hours online making snide and smart ass comments on how other people's ideas are bullshit, you come up with your own idea. really. I'm sure we'd all love to hear some of your brilliant thoughts on how to spend more sensibly during this economy's shaky state. Really. (ok, really not, i just think you're an ass)

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