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Laura Rowley Money & Happiness

Laura Rowley, Money & Happiness

How to Save $400 a Month on Groceries

by Laura Rowley

Good (1511 Ratings)
2.682978/5
Posted on Wednesday, June 4, 2008, 12:00AM

Grocery shopping is like playing the slots in Vegas.

Last week I won, saving $25 by planning ahead and using coupons. Other weeks, the house wins -- I forget my list, miss the store circular, find out my coupons have expired -- and the register drawer devours my cash with a malevolent snap. Gotcha!

Saving Takes Time

Herb Sorensen, head of the Oregon-based consulting firm Sorensen Associates, has spent four decades tracking the grocery business. He says that there are two approaches to pricing: Everyday low prices à la Wal-Mart, and high-low prices featuring capricious weekly specials.

"High-low is a hellish way to run a store -- it's very inefficient," Sorensen says. "But a consumer who wants to invest the time and effort can make out like a bandit by buying on the low side."

The trick is to be a sophisticate -- catch the product at its cheapest price, buy it with a coupon, and stock up. Problem is, few people have the time to track when toilet paper hits bottom (no pun intended) or spend hours snipping coupons. The solution: Two fast-growing websites that do some of the legwork for you, and another that offers low prices and free shipping.

Playing the Grocery Game

I asked Californian Teri Gault, founder of The Grocery Game, if you can feed a family of four on $100 a week. "Absolutely," she replies, "when you know how to play the game."

Her site tracks pricing on 10,000 items in 126 supermarkets and drug chains nationwide. Subscribers pay $10 every eight weeks for a list of local deals and unadvertised specials from one store ($5 for each additional store). The site has 100,000 members.

"Teri's List" matches manufacturer's coupons with weekly specials and unadvertised deals, and is color-coded: green for items that are free when purchased with a coupon; blue for goods that have hit bottom and should be stocked; and black for products that represent a good deal but haven't quite hit bottom.

The Grocery Game provides printable coupons and tells you where to find others in your Sunday newspaper circulars. The key is to save the inserts and label them with the date -- then pull out the ones you need (provided in Teri's List).

A Gamer's Tale

Grocery Game subscriber Wendy Burger, a Maryland freelance writer and mother of three, cut her grocery bill by 40 to 50 percent, and now spends roughly $500 a month. She pays about $98 a year for the weekly list on her grocery store and drug chain, but partly offset the cost by dropping her warehouse club membership.

"When I first started, I spent a lot more time planning because I had to figure out the coupon thing," says Burger, who surfs myClipper.com to get multiple copies of a single coupon. For instance, she paid a 50-cent "handling fee" to buy 30 coupons for $1 off organic milk, saving $30 over the course of three months.

"It's not for everyone," Burger says, adding that it's somewhat counterintuitive to buy cheap, stock up, and plan meals based on what's in the cupboard. "You have to be willing to get the coupons, and be careful to stockpile things you use a lot but that don't go bad," she adds. Burger keeps her stash in a bookcase and a separate freezer. (See my blog for a dietician's advice on products that freeze best.)

The Mother of All Coupon Clippers

Stephanie Nelson, an Atlanta mother of two, started The Coupon Mom seven years ago to teach people how to get cheap grocery items to donate to charity. The site has grown threefold since last December, and now has 450,000 members.

Nelson's goal is to show families how to create well-balanced meals for $100 or less a week with an hour of planning -- something she does successfully for her spouse and two teenage sons. The Coupon Mom tracks the top 41 supermarkets as well as drug and discount stores.

Like the Grocery Game, the Coupon Mom offers a database that matches store deals to relevant coupons, but doesn't pinpoint when an item has hit its lowest price. "If it's buy-one-get-one-free, or over 50 percent off and you use a coupon, that's a good deal," Nelson says. "If you go for rock-bottom, you may end up with a cart full of air freshener, frozen waffles, and cat food. I don't think that's practical."

Plan Ahead

Nelson recently went head-to-head with a television reporter, shopping in the same store with the same list. At checkout, the reporter spent $232.60 for a week's worth of meals for a family of four. Nelson's bill was $73.35.

Planning ahead and being brand-flexible saves the most money, Nelson insists. "The average shopper is doing what the reporter did -- 'here's the brand I always get -- it's only 50 cents more.' But if you're the average family buying a hundred items a week, that adds up quickly," she notes. Excluding coupons and the use of a store loyalty card, Nelson's bill was still about $100 less than the reporter's.

When you seize the deal, buy the smaller package rather than the jumbo size, advises Gary Foreman, founder of The Dollar Stretcher website. "Retailers have trained consumers to buy big, but people are starting to find that the larger package is more expensive per unit," he says. And with a coupon, the smaller size offers better savings per unit ($1 off a four-pack of yogurt saves 25 cents per container, versus 8 to 9 cents each for the 12-pack).

Nelson's site is solely funded by advertising, which means the registration path can be a bit annoying, but she insists it's necessary to keep the service free and growing (and, to be fair, The Grocery Game has plenty of banner ads). "We found 48 percent of users are donating food to charity because of the program when they hadn't in the past," Nelson says. "That's really exciting." The Coupon Mom provides a free e-book explaining the system -- see my blog for a quick how-to.

Virtual Food Shopping

If you frequent warehouse stores, check out Amazon.com's grocery service, which ships 22,000 nonperishable items in bulk -- free, if your bill surpasses $25. A recent promotion featured $20 off a purchase of $49 in products from a combination of Keebler, Kellogg's, Carr's, and other brands. A subscriber program -- in which you choose items you regularly buy and how often you want them delivered -- provides additional savings.

"The grocery service went into beta about a year ago, and they haven't heavily promoted it," says Alicia Rockmore, a former packaged goods brand manager and founder of Buttoned Up, an organizational products firm. "They run great deals. If you're an Amazon prime member, you get free shipping and it ships two-day. You can also shop by sale pages -- items that are 90 percent off, 80 percent off, et cetera."

Once you've exploited online resources, don't overlook other ways to save -- targeting stores that double coupons or using your tax rebate to get an additional 10 percent off grocery purchases, for instance.

Burger says using an online grocery list has turned her into a shopping diva. "I'll find deodorant for 25 cents, but I want it for free, and I know if I wait I can get it," she says. "I'm still stunned at how much stuff you don't have to buy. I love it."

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428 Comments

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  • ragaai - Thursday, February 5, 2009, 12:09PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    Great advice! did you mention that bying large portions leads to more waste ? perishables may not last another day, my family gets less interested in the left overs every day, even every hour after the first time the meal is served.

  • shortcake - Thursday, January 22, 2009, 9:08PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    i think its a good article. walmart is hit and miss and usually pretty good for staples. there are a lot of coupons for processed food but sometimes you get lucky like last week and get coupons for frozen veggies or 10% off your $50 purchase at shop and save. i am a single mom of 3 and there are times i do ok cost wise and sometimes they just go with out that tasty treat or the ultra soft tissue cause its not an option. i need to eat healthier due to allergies and medical issues but if the money isnt there then you cant. now dont forget farmers markets or growing your own garden or co-ops. i donated food to a food pantry one day at the end of month and really needed toilet paper but didnt have the cash they traded with me and we both won. there are ways to make it work and sometimes you might not save $400 but even $10 bucks is better than $0. thats a night at the dollar show or the red box (movie rental) and microwave popcorn! also for those who dont know there is also a program called Angle Food Ministries that sells a box of quality food worth $60-$80 worth of food for $30 bucks all over the US and you dont have to be a part of a church or even poor. there is NO income limit so save some money. there is a website for it. plus you can order specialty boxes with more of fruit/veggies or meat and senior meals (but anyone can get them), we need to be more of a resourceful society and not so into instant gratisfication. i admit i have been there and trying to not be. with a busy life and 3 kids with special needs its not easy but its worth a try in the long run. plus dont forget if you save money on your clothes, toys, and car maintance with coupons you might be able to afford the things you need or really want in the grocery store. think about it. target and walmart donate to salvation army and goodwill. those jeans for $20 bucks retail are now $5 bucks brand new with tags at salvation army. shopping at those palces and garage sales doesnt make you always poor but frugal!

  • dono - Monday, July 7, 2008, 2:56PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    This article did not shed any light for me. People's diets and food preference will dictate where and how they will shop.

  • Jordan - Monday, July 7, 2008, 2:15PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    Some of yall are taking this article to heart no. Not all of you are going to save 400 a month. For the super health no it will not save you money. Dang people THINK. IF you clean your house it will save you money as well. I went to Publix and got Lysol Bathroom Cleaner for .45 cent!!!! Also you DONT HAVE TO GO TO WAL-MART. I never go there and save a ton coupon mom does coupons for other stores here in Georgia she does it for Kroger, Publix, Winn-Dixie, CVS, Walgreens, Rite-Aid, along with the Giants WAL MART & TARGET. To be honest I havent really set foot in a Wal-Mart since I started using couponmom cause I save so much else where.

  • Country - Monday, July 7, 2008, 2:12PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    For the record, this is a very good article, if you understand it. That being said, there are a few things I would like to address to some of the people that wrote comments about this article being bad. Some complain that their budget is small when it comes to food and they couldn't save 400/month, ok, you're not saving 400, but you are still saving. If you don't want the savings, write me a check for your average savings each month for a year, I'll gladly take the free money, and thats what it is, its free money, money you would have normally spent, but using a couple tips and knowhow have saved. The article talks about online shopping, whats wrong with that? If you get a good deal on something online and your cart has enough so that you get discount shipping or free shipping, isn't that better than driving to and from a grocery store as much and using the Gas? plus most of us are impulse shoppers and the Food Industry knows it, they want us in the stores so we see things and want to buy them. Many of us go shopping when we're hungry, bad bad bad! We'll buy more because we are hungry, Buying online, you will usually not be hungry, thats because lets face it, you are online, your meals for that day are already taken care of one way or another. Also, buying online lets you stock up on nonperishable items, which can be stored basically anywhere, these things can be found for dirt cheap online, and can cost 90% more in stores, because of shipping costs to the stores, one way or another theres the issue of shipping, which way you wanna get it? Paying all the time or some of the time and saving? You want a good tip, heres one, when buying products, stay away from the middle shelf Items, why? Top Brand names pay Store chains and markets for that space. They want their products in the middle, at around eye level, cause thats where most of us look first. Try buying top shelf or bottom shelf, these items have the same basic nutrition most of the time and usually cost a good amount less. For those that didn't like the article, most I seen was a food budget of about 140-200 a month, if you are not doing the steps talked about in the article, try them for 1 year, you really don't have anything to lose, cept for maybe room in your wallet for more cash, I don't know about the rest of you, but thats something I'd like to lose. Means I can go on road trips more, or allow myself to buy that thing I've wanted for awhile, but couldn't because I had to worry about money for those little things called Necessities, like FOOD. Most of us know that Oil and food prices are rising, not as many know that some prices for other things are dropping, and those things can usually be found online, you can shop online for clothes, shoes, boots, uniforms, uniform equipment, tools, supplies, household items, today even movie / concert / sporting event Tickets. The only thing we need to do is learn how to change our mindset so we use this resource to its fullest and we'll save BIG TIME!!!

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