How we slashed our spending in January

Picture of snowdrops to illustrate my post on a new year's resolution to cut our spending

New year, new start to spending less

 

I started January full of resolutions to cut our spending. I’m not alone in this – 44% of people made New Year’s resolutions to spend less, according to research by Scottish Friendly.

Post: Five frugal resolutions for 2018

December is always a expensive month for us. Not just because of Christmas, but also because of the pile up of family celebrations. My daughter, son, husband, father-in-law, sister-in-law and brother-in-law all have birthdays within a month of Christmas. January can seem particularly long, after getting paid a week early before Christmas, and then waiting an extra week to get paid at the end of the month.

I therefore decided to keep my spending diary up-to-date during January, and see if we could cut our spending by a quarter.

If you follow me on Twitter, you may have seen my #MoneySavingYear tweets, with the small ways I save money each day.

Read on to find out how it went!

 

Picture of our Christmas tree and presents around it, before we cut spending during January

Plenty of spending on presents

Spending surge during December

I started by checking where our money disappeared during December. A chunk of money went on Christmas presents, Christmas cards and posting parcels, but luckily that wouldn’t be repeated in January.

With so much to celebrate, our food spending also surged during December. I bought food for one children’s party, a couple of birthday teas, Christmas itself and a house full of visitors for New Year’s Eve.

Plus I stocked up on bargain booze – but even with offers and cashback, I still paid £48.99 for the 12 bottles from Virgin Wine  and another £45 for 6 bottles of prosecco from Sainsbury’s.

My husband and I also went for a rare child-free evening out, with a meal to celebrate his birthday. We had a brilliant time at one of The Ram’s Grill Nights. But despite the fiver off from their loyalty card, the combination of food, cheeky cocktails, tip, babysitter and her taxi home does add up!

With a quieter January ahead, I reckoned there was definitely room to save on food, alcohol and eating out.

After a good month work-wise, we’d also splashed out during December on getting various stuff sorted at home. I’m still very glad about the new carpet, and help with DIY, taming the garden and cleaning the house, but it all came with bills attached.

Time for a new start in the New Year!

 

Picture of the carpet fitter fitting our new bedroom carpet, an unusual expenditure during December

Fitting the long-awaited carpet

Starting January

I began the month resolved to spend as little as possible – only for the storm of expenses at the start of term.

New uniform, where school trousers were getting flappy round the ankles. Hair cuts for all. School dinners for half a term. Childcare while I was working away for a week. Cubs uniform as my son moved up from Beavers, and Cubs subs for both children. Piano lessons, guitar lessons, deposits for school trips and Cub camps.

Gracious, I’d be good at money saving if I didn’t have any kids… (I joke. But still)

 

PIcture of the Home Economics Cookbook by Jane Ashley which we used when cutting our spending during January

Brilliant budget cook book, with weekly meal plans

Slashing our food spending

One of the biggest bills for any family is their food shopping. Normally, I keep our costs low by cooking from scratch, rather than relying on ready meals, takeaways or eating out.

During January, I made an extra effort to cut food costs, which included:

  • Transforming leftovers from Christmas and New Year, like retrieving leftover turkey from the freezer, making soups from leftover veg and making a stilton quiche. (Also: trifle for breakfast. Ooops). I hate it when food goes to waste, it feels like throwing money in the bin.
  • Meal planning like crazy. Even when I went away for work, I still did a meal plan, and took packed lunches during my days in an office. I also left behind a fish pie and some slow cooker bolognese , so my family wouldn’t resort to the local chippy to stave off starvation.
  • Bagging yellow-stickered bargains. I’m still keen on buying cut-price short-dated food from the reduced sections in the supermarket. Often it means I can include more varied (read: expensive) food in our meals for less.
  • Trying out budget recipes. We also did a week eating from the fab Home Economics cook book. Using one of Jane’s shopping lists and meal plans, we spent less than £40 for a week’s food for our family of four!
  • Buying less booze. I can’t pretend we did dry January, but our alcohol expenditure was limited to a £1.99 bottle of beer. This is less virtuous when you remember we still had our stash from December…
  • Using supermarket cashback apps, so for example I got a couple of packets of fancy Taylor’s coffee for free, thanks to cashback and referral credits from the Shopmium app, which would normally cost £7.
  • Celebrating at home. For one friend’s birthday, we rocked up at her house with food as well as gifts. Great evening eating, drinking and chatting – but less expensive than eating out.
  • Tried to avoid takeaways. We did resort to takeaways twice, once after a long week at work, and then grabbing McDonalds for the kids on the way back from a trip to London. However, another night when I couldn’t face cooking my husband picked up a baguette and cooked whole chicken from the supermarket instead. We ate it with salad we had at home, saved a tenner, and the leftovers lasted a couple more meals. I was also glad I made a quiche before our London trip, so my husband and I could eat that on our return.
  • Stopping shopping. Simple but true! Towards the end of January, when I was trying to stick to our meal plan and use up what we had in the house, I stopped nipping to our local Co-op. If I wasn’t in the shop, I couldn’t spend the money!
  • Got creative with our cupboard contents. I’d forgotten my daughter needed a packed lunch for a school trip. She started listing all the crisps, Frubes, drinks cartons and snacks she wanted to take. Then we had a chat about what she liked, based on what we had in the house. End result: a packed lunch with apple juice decanted in a water bottle, plastic tubs of yogurt and tinned pineapple, a bag of home-made popcorn and a slice of home-made banana cake. In the end, I just bought a tin of tuna for her favourite tuna and sweetcorn sandwiches. Phew.

More on cutting food costs: 80+ ways to save money on your food shopping

 

Picture of shiny new silver Salter scales, received under guarantee when my previous scales stopped working properly

Shiny new scales under the Salter guarantee

Sticking to my spending diary

I’ve waxed lyrical about spending diaries in the past. Keeping a spending diary remains my top money saving tip. Whether you write down everything you spend, add it to a spreadsheet or tap it into your phone, a spending diary makes it much easier to see where all your money goes.

Trouble is, towards the end of the year I got busier, and the receipts started to pile up. I figured January was the chance for a new start.

This month, I’ve really stuck to my spending diary, and updated it for December too. Scanning through my bank statements and credit card bills also brought some additional savings:

  • Spotted a missing refund. Last month I posted back a coat that was too small for my son, but I noticed the money was never refunded. When I emailed the company to ask what happened, they promised to process the refund manually – saving £21!
  • Refunded for some broken crockery. I ordered some bowls and plates online, but sadly some arrived broken. Rather than putting off an akward conversation with customer services, I took photos, rang, emailed and chased it up. Net result: £44 back.
  • Claimed under a guarantee. Rather than replacing our elderly and now erratic kitchen scales, I realised they had a 15 year guarantee. I contacted Salter, and they sent me a shiny new set for free, saving the £15 to £20 I would otherwise have spent.
  • Changed my mobile phone deal. I also spotted that my mobile phone bills had been creeping up, boosted by £3/day charges for going over my data allowance. After calling Virgin, I arranged a new SIM only deal with an extra 1GB data for only £2 extra month. The savings won’t show up in January, but should help in future!
  • Took advantage of low cost activities. Although January was a quieter month than December, we didn’t spend weekends at home like hermits. Country walks up Holbeck’s Hill and along the Shotley Peninsula helped blow the cobwebs away. We spent a day at the grandparents, visited the local swimming pool and finished with an outing to London. We headed off for our family Christmas present: a trip to see School of Rock, thanks to tickets bought for £200 less during the “Get into London Theatre” sale.

More money saving tips over at Scottish Friendly

Picture of my children far off in the mud and water of the Shotley Peninsula, when we were out for a free country walk

Out exploring the Shotley Peninsula – and all for free

Results of slashing spending in January

I figured cutting spending in January would be a breeze, after December’s unusual expenses like Christmas presents, Christmas food and the new bedroom carpet.

On the food front, my efforts to save money really paid off.

I cut our spending on groceries by more than half, down 57% for our family of four from more than £95 a week in December to £41 a week in January.

Low supermarket bills don’t mean much if you’re eating out all the time, but we also cut spending on takeaways, meals out and alcohol by 70%.

Elsewhere, the trouble is that “unusual” expenses seem to crop up every month. If it’s not Christmas presents, it might be the annual household insurance bill, holiday deposit or getting the car taxed, serviced and through the MOT.

We started January with all the bills for the new term, and finished with a big bill for refilling our almost-empty oil tank. We’re not connected to gas, and rely on heating oil for our central heating and hot water. Hopefully the heating oil will stretch till the summer, but it was a big hit for one month.

I was very glad we’d cut costs overall. After the £987 oil bill on 31 January, we just squeaked past the target of cutting costs by a quarter. Overall, our spending was down 27% in January compared to December.

 

Picture of the oil delivery man checking the hose from his van through our front gate

The oil delivery that nearly scuppered our spending

What next?

After cracking down on food costs during January, I’m determined to keep up the good work. Negotiating a better mobile deal has also inspired me to take a long hard look at our other utility bills too.

I’d like to cut our spending further during February – but who knows what other unusual expenses we’ll face! A storm knocked our fence down last week, so we need to get that fixed.

Now over to you – did you make any resolutions to cut costs? What’s been your biggest saving in January? Do say in the comments, I’d love to hear.

 

This is post is a collaboration with Scottish Friendly

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4 Comments

  1. Sue
    1st February 2018 / 5:35 pm

    Some good budgeting there. And yes filling an oil tank does bump up the expenses for the month it arrives doesn’t it … our much needed delivery comes next week!!

    • 1st February 2018 / 6:32 pm

      I was so relieved when the oil delivery arrived. Ordered just over a week before, and we were running ominously low then!

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