Taking control of your money is fun, I swear.
I run our family budget and it is one of my favourite things to do. We have a budget we follow and I tweak it a couple of times a week, in front of my favourite TV show, with a cup of tea, and maybe a biscuit.
There are so many ways to make the most out of your money. We work hard for it. Spending it well is so satisfying. Watching it go further due to smart spending is even better.
I have lots of tricks and strategies for spending money well. Here are my top six.
1. Buy in bulk.
Think of cleaning products, toilet paper, beef and in my house, passata. By accessing places like Costco or websites like Grocery Run and Catch of the Day, you can buy in bulk and save yourself a fortune.
The rule is to never buy something you a) have never used before, and b) don’t normally consume regularly. It’s easy to become snake-charmed by great deals, but if you aren’t going to use it or if it isn’t something that will save you money in the long run, don’t bother. Be strong.
Top Comments
This bank-sponsored post concerns me. There are some good tips (buy in bulk, don't pay credit card interest), but using the 55 day interest free period to pay for things "so you don't have to take money out of your saving account" is exactly how credit card debt starts. And accessing free financial planning advice at the bank is like asking Ronald MacDonald for advice on healthy eating - he'll just point you to their "healthy" salad menu, but you'll still be at Macca's. Consolidating debts is just another loan with it's own interest rate. The bank's job is to sell you products that will make the bank money. The advisor's job is to take a commission on what they sell you.
There is plenty of free, unbiased finacial advice around, don't get it from your bank.