Spending Money Within $300
Do you think this is a joke spending money only $300 a month for
the whole family? With this tight budget, what sort of food
would make the list? Could you save $25 a month on groceries?
How about $50 or $100? Possibly you could cut your bill by
almost 50% if you consider some of the following suggestions:
1. Divide the budget you have into three categories; weekly,
bi-weekly and monthly. Once you have the totals fixed, try to
find a way to make it work. If you budgeted too tight, only then
consider how much more you really need to spend.
2. Identify your WEEKLY needs; milk, bread, fruits. These will
be your saving graces when the troops are hungry. You can load
up every week and always have a healthy snack available. Think
about $15/week.
3. Identify your BI-WEEKLY needs; eggs, cheese, vegetables, meat
and cheese for sandwiches etc. These items have a slightly
longer shelf life but you will watch how much you use when you
know there's still four days until your next purchase. Try $20
every two weeks.
4. Get the remainder of your groceries in one place. Use cash to
pay (to avoid temptation of over spending) and work out your
shopping list ahead of time. You only need to do this once as
many of the items (Cereal, meat etc.) will need to be
repurchased each time. Other items (sugar, flour etc.) may be
substituted every other month. In this example you have $200
left.
5. Have a schedule of meals that you can rotate. Cheap, healthy
meals like stir fry can be inexpensive as they use less meat
than full pieces of chicken or beef for dinner. Plan to have a
meat meal offset by a simpler dish like pasta every other night.
This way your family will not go through 'feast-and-famine' when
they eat like kings the first week and are eating canned chili
every night for the last week.
Always determine your meals based on what you really plan to
cook. If you have easy weeknight staples, try to find the
cheapest method of preparing them, or make do with less pre-
packaged affair on other nights when you have more time. Using
items like frozen vegetables can make eating cheap also healthy
and convenient.
Clearly the $300 suggestion will depend on your family, the age
of your children and how much your budget really allows.
Whatever your budget, taking the time to draw up a plan and
think about your choices will guarantee that you keep more cash
in your wallet for other important things.