50 Ways To Beat The Credit
Crunch
Here are 50 top tips to help you beat the credit crunch and
save money. Of course if you really feel up to a
challenge you could try living on just £1 per day limke a
teacher did after a drinken bet - Mail 06th
September 2008
Food
1 Buy in season. Purple-stemmed broccoli, beetroot, leeks,
carrots and rhubarb are in stores now. Avoid courgettes,
asparagus and raspberries, which are being airlifted in. Check
what's ripe at www.eattheseasons.co.uk.
2 Give up your daily latte. You'll save a staggering £10 a
week.
Piggy bank
3 Plan a week's worth of meals, make a list of ingredients,
and shop for these items only - that way, no food will go to
waste and you'll be less tempted by unnecessary goodies.
4 Go for supermarkets' own brand. They're cheaper and for
the basics rather than the finest - the difference is often
little more than packaging.
5 Take a packed lunch to work. You'll save about a fiver a
day, and cut down on calories.
6 Use up leftovers The end of a chicken, and all the
off-cuts of veg, can be transformed into stock; and if you are
rigorous when picking flesh of the bones, fish can be turned
into a tasty pie.
7 Don't throw away the ends of dry cheeses. Put scrags of
cheddar and parmesan into an airtight container and use in
soups and bakes.
8 Bring out the Tupperware. Try to cook a bit more than you
need of things like lasagne, stew and shepherds pie, then
freeze small portions: cheaper (and healthier) than the frozen
ready meals you'd otherwise use when you want to save time.
9 Freeze leftover red wine. Put the remaining half-glass in
an ice tray - the cubes can be added easily to sauces, and will
save opening a bottle for cooking.
10 Defy Delia. Don't cheat by assembling food from tins and
frozen mash, cook it yourself. It's far cheaper as well as
nicer.
11 Buy in bulk. Markets and greengrocers will give good
deals on apples, potatoes and other staples if you buy by the
box.
12 Grow your own. Find a corner of the garden to sow a rich
variety of salad leaves, which grow like weeds.
13 Ban the bottle. Drink tap water; if you leave it to stand
for half an hour, the slight chlorine taste goes away. You can
also flavour it with fresh mint or lemon.
14 Shop for groceries on Wednesdays. Order your online
shopping midweek from www.tesco.com and save up to £1.75
on weekend charges.
House and Home Money Saving
Tips
15 Subscribe to Which? magazine ( www.which.magazine.co.uk ) to get
the best buy on consumer goods. It's offering a three-month
trial for £3, after which each issue will be £6.25 a
month.
16 Don't accept the first call package suggested by your
mobile phone company. They pitch them at a level where you are
likely to exceed the quota of calls and texts so that you then
pay swingeing extra call costs. Go for one that costs slightly
more but gives a margin of error.
17 Draw up a will using a DIY kit (£14.99 from WH Smith)
instead of paying a solicitor to do it for you.
25 Crack the code. www.sendmediscounts.co.uk rounds up
promotional codes, shopping discounts and special offers
available online.
26 Book a restaurant online. Reservation websites like Top
Table ( www.toptable.co.uk ) lists
discount offers - often 50 per cent off - from restaurants all
over the country.
27 Buy contact lenses online. Some of the big supermarkets,
as well as online specialists such as www.postoptics.co.uk sell
lenses for a fraction of the high street price.
28 Cancel your pet insurance. Most policies don't cover the
cost of routine examinations and innoculations.
29 Buy own-brand painkillers.
30 Get a lodger. If you have a spare room, spruce it up and
rent it out.
Leisure Money Saving
Tips
31 Give up your television licence Get rid of your
television and watch programmes on your computer using the
BBC's online iPlayer ( www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer )
after they've been broadcast.
32 Cancel your Sky subscription. A Freeview set-top box
offers most of the channels that you'll want to watch.
And with a plug-in box that records programmes to a
hard-drive - we found the Fusion FVRT95 for £66.14, including
delivery, on www.ebuyer.com - you
get to keep programmes to watch at your leisure, and can
also pause live TV, just like Sky+. But for free.
33 Buy cheaper music. Download music from Russian websites.
Legal sites such as gomusic.ru offer thousands of albums for
less than a pound.
34 Cancel your gym membership. Many leisure centres offer
membership schemes and personal training and are kitted out
with the full range of equipment for a fraction of the price of
a private gym.
35 Ditch the football season ticket. Or at least split the
cost with friends. After all, how many of those midweek
fixtures can you really get to?
36 Get cut-price cinema tickets. The three large multiplex
chains - Vue, Odeon and Cineworld - all offer cheap weekend
deals for families.
Getting
around
37 Cycle to work
If your employer has joined the tax-free Cycle Scheme (
www.cyclescheme.co.uk ),
you can get 20 per cent off a new set of wheels - as well as a
helmet and accessories.
38 Use a vehicle-sharing scheme like Streetcar (
www.streetcar.co.uk ).
Membership costs £49.50 a year, with a VW Polo - the
cheapest option - costing £28 for 24 hours during the week
(£39.50 for 24 hours at the weekend), and £125 from Monday
to Friday (£165 for a seven-day stretch). Also check out
Zipcar ( www.zipcar.co.uk ).
39 Join a car pool. Www.carshare.com has a list
of car-sharing sites.
40 Find the cheapest flights. Search online with a price
comparison site like kayak.com; book as far ahead as you can;
travel out of season; fly mid-afternoon midweek.
41 Invest in a family railcard. Travel with at least one
child and you'll qualify for the £24 discount card that offers
1/3 savings on adult fares, and 60 per cent off kids' fares.
Visit www.family-railcard.co.uk .
Cut your Fuel
bills
42 Fill your cavities. About a third of the heat lost in an
uninsulated home is through the walls, so a cost-effective way
to save energy is cavity wall insulation - a hassle-free job
that could save up to £90 on annual bills.
43 Look for the logo. When buying new electrical appliances,
look for the Energy Saving Recommended logo - a blue wedge -
which indicates an efficient appliance that will be cheaper to
run. Replacing an old, inefficient fridge-freezer could save
you up to £37 a year.
44 Invest in energy-efficient light bulbs. They last about
10 times longer than ordinary ones, and cost from as little as
99p from places like John Lewis. For each bulb you fit, you can
save up to £7 on your annual electricity bill - Other
types of bulbs etc can be found at http://ebulbshop.com/
45 Lag the loft. Around 15 per cent could be shaved off your
heating bill with 270mm-thick loft insulation.
46 Check your home's energy levels online. For a report on
how much energy could be saved in your home, complete the
Energy Saving Trust's survey ( www.energysavingtrust.org.uk. )
* For more tips on saving money on heating bills, visit
www.est.org.uk
* Consider changing your supplier to utility Warehouse
Personal
finances
47 Change credit cards. If you have debts, switch them to a
''balance transfer offer" that stays at a low interest rate
until the debt is repaid. It saves the effort of making
repeated applications for short-term 0 per cent deals.
48 Remortgage early. If you are coming to the end of a fixed
rate deal on your mortgage you should start organising your
next deal as early as possible - three months before the end if
you can.
Use a broker who is fees-free and ''whole of market",
meaning they will look at almost every available mortgage.
London and Country ( www.lcplc.co.uk ) and Charcol (0800
71 81 91) are the only nationwide brokers which fit these
criteria.
49 Work out a budget. Don't work out your finances on the
back of a fag packet; you need to look at everything you spend
to get a true picture. Use the planner at www.moneysavingexpert.com/budgeting .
50 Reclaim what's yours. Check whether you can reclaim PPI,
credit card charges, bank fees or mortgage fees, or get your
council tax rebanded.
Reproduced with thanks to the Telegraph Newspapers
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