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Stephanie Nelson - CouponMom

Cut Your Grocery Bill In Half! with Stephanie Nelson, The Coupon Mom

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5 EASY Tips to Save BIG at the Drugstore

 

CouponMom.com makes it easy for you to find the best deals! Every week the national drugstores’ deals lists on CouponMom.com show shoppers how to stack the savings to get free name-brand products.

Here the top 5 ways to find the BEST deals at your drugstore:

  1. Check Store Ads and CouponMom.com before you shop. This is your first stop for savings. All drugstores feature sale items and other promotions in their weekly ad.  CouponMom.com filters the store ads by identifying the best deals and showing shoppers how to combine coupons and promotions at each drugstore for maximum savings. Circulars are available in the store, online, and in Sunday paper and include store coupons.
  2. Use Store Coupons. Drugstores issue their own coupons for many items. The magic of store coupons is that you can combine them with manufacturers’ coupons if there are any for that item. If so, you can use both coupons on the purchase of a single qualifying item and increase your chance of getting it free.
  3. BOGO. The buy one, get one (BOGO) coupon combo is where savings begin to pile up. The chains usually offer many BOGO free or BOGO 50% off and if you have coupons, you start trading into freebie country.
  4. Automatic rewards programs. Drugstores offer more savings with automatic rewards programs.  Shoppers can earn reward points on promotional items that they can use just like cash on a future visit.  Shoppers can earn store rewards on top of the sale prices, coupons and other store promotions to get items free, and in  many cases to earn a “profit” in the form of store credit.
  5. Stack the Savings and Roll Rewards:  When shoppers “stack” multiple coupons and promotions to get free items, in future weeks they can use their store rewards points to pay for their purchases.  By strategically “rolling” their rewards forward by using them to buy the new free deals, the out-of-pocket cost will be minimal and they’ll be getting hundreds of dollars of free personal, household and grocery items all year long.

Because learning the Drugstore Savings Strategies can be complex, Stephanie Nelson of CouponMom.com has written detailed Ebooks for CVS and Walgreens, available at no cost! You can download the CVS Ebook here, and download the Walgreens Ebook here. Find Ebooks, Instructional Videos and more savings tips on the couponmom.com  “How-To” Page. Happy Shopping!

Five Ways to Save on Snacks

5waystosavesnacks

 

Five Ways to Save…

Avoid the Snack Tax!

by Stephanie Nelson

  1. After school. A snack after school is a sacred rite for many families. Resist the urge to let your kids fill up on pricey nibbles because it is convenient. Keep a bowl of washed fruit available. Slice carrots or celery and keep them in the fridge with homemade low-fat dressing or dip. Stock the pantry with pretzels, popcorn, crackers or rice cakes that you buy on sale or with coupons.
  2. Read the fine print. A bag of traditional tortilla chips can weigh twice as much as ones that are “scoop” shaped. At first glance, the bags seem about the same size. Look for this in the cracker aisle too. Cracker shapes of the same brand vary and the ounces inside the box may too. Read the detailed information to make sure you don’t get “scooped.”
  3. Homemade. If you are a room parent, you know how those baked goods can add up. We are all busy, so bake strategically as you shop. Make bar cookies by pressing dough into a pan instead of rolling out individual balls and shave valuable time. Learning to make banana bread gives you a plan for that too ripe fruit. Homemade tortilla, pita, and bagel chips have more protein and fiber than the packaged varieties while costing as little as 5 cents per ounce.
  4. Avoid the100 calorie” pack racket. It takes less than 5 minutes to split a bag of pretzels into 100-calorie serving sizes of about 21 per bag. At a savings of $2.50 for those 5 minutes of effort, I “earn” $30 an hour by doing it myself. The next time you are tempted to add a box of “100 calorie” snacks to your cart, ask yourself if you can afford to pay someone $62,400/year to count out pretzels for you.
  5. Try Generic. Chances are, your kids won’t turn down a cookie just because the box lacks a brand name. I think it’s silly not to at least consider trading down to the store –brand variety every once in awhile. By purchasing generic Nilla Wafers, I’ve saved a little more than 25 cents per serving. Buying the name brand would be sort of like throwing away a quarter each time we ate a serving of cookies. Are you ok with that? I’m not.

 

Stephanie Nelson is the Coupon Mom. Her web sitewww.couponmom.com , has 6 million members, and she is established as the nation’s top expert in couponing across the country. Stephanie has been on every major national television talk show and taught millions how to save money for the past 11 years. She has been called ‘”the rock star of the recession” by the Washington Post and her book, The Coupon Mom’s Guide to Cutting Your Grocery Bills in Half, is a New York Times best seller.

Five Ways to Save on Halloween

halloween savings

Halloween can be an expensive holiday, with projected average spending of $82 per shopper, up 12% from last year. A little creativity and Strategic Shopping using Coupon Mom’s savings tips will help keep the fun in Halloween without breaking the bank.

Stephanie Nelson
The Coupon Mom

According to the National Retail Federation, Americans are expected to spend an average $82.93 per shopper as compared to $74.34 last year, a 12% increase. In total, Americans will spend $8.4 billion dollars with the majority of the spending going to costumes, candy and greeting cards. However, using proven savings tips from Stephanie Nelson, the Coupon Mom, parents can make sure everyone has a fun Halloween at a fraction of the average spending. Use her Five Ways to Save this Halloween to avoid scary bills later!

1. Costumes: Instead of buying full-priced costumes at a party store, shoppers can challenge their creativity and get simple costume ideas from Google, Facebook or Pinterest. Thrift stores are a great source of costume ideas. Parents can make it fun for the kids to come up with inexpensive costume ideas by rewarding them with a few dollars if they come up with free or inexpensive costume alternatives, saving the cost of the $35 party store costume. Parents will be teaching a valuable lesson at the same time as saving money.

2. Candy: Take advantage of national stores’ sales on Halloween candy, and stack their sales with store and newspaper coupons. Many of the major drugstore chains like CVS, Walgreens and Rite Aid will also have automatic rebates on Halloween candy, making it possible to save 70% or more on name brand candy that trick-or-treaters love. Find the best candy deals from the store deals lists at http://www.CouponMom.com.

 

3. Halloween Greeting Cards: Save the $3 to $5 per card by making a homemade version or shop the two for $1 card section at the dollar store or discount stores like Walmart.

4. Pumpkins: Shoppers should buy pumpkins on Halloween Day when the pumpkin sellers are willing to drop their prices to clear out their inventory.

5. Halloween Decor and candy bags: Head to the dollar store and get great Halloween decorations at a fraction of the cost of the big party store. Save the expense of Halloween candy bags or buckets and use a pillowcase which is more durable and less likely to tear.

Stephanie Nelson is the Coupon Mom. Her web site, http://www.CouponMom.com, has 7 million members, and she is established as the nation’s top expert in couponing across the country. Stephanie has been on every major national television talk show and taught millions how to save money for the past 12 years. She has been called ‘”the rock star of the recession” by the Washington Post and her book, The Coupon Mom’s Guide to Cutting Your Grocery Bills in Half, is a New York Times best seller.