Anonymous wrote:Luxury cars and first class tickets.
I used to basically only buy cheap household goods but have experimented upgrading in several areas and have been happy with the results in some areas where I feel like I really do get what I pay for. I now order Philz coffee beans, which have been a big upgrade, Soapply hand soap, which made a big difference with my dry hands this winter, and better Charmin toilet paper, which really holds up and feels better. I've also tried a few that were not worth it like an expensive deodorant and floor cleaner. I recommend trying a few things and seeing what small increases might make a comparatively large difference!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Food. We eat out maybe 2-3 times a week, and even then it's pretty basic (wings, Chinese). I also am vigilant about not wasting food and we eat simply at home unless it's a special occasion - lots of pasta, soup, sandwiches. I do splurge on sourdough from our local bakery - $7 a loaf!
We share a car and it is a non-luxury brand.
Clothes. I will occasionally get a nice dress from Nordstrom but only for a wedding or similar. Day to day my family wears clothes from TJ Maxx, Target, and Walmart (esp the kids). We also don't buy clothes that often. I do have a LOT of shoes - my weakness - but nothing designer. I've been using the same handbags for years.
Our house. We bought a small and not updated house and I have no interest in moving or expanding our existing space. Our mortgage is $1600 a month and we live in an excellent school district.
I do have cleaners. I consider it worth every penny.
I spend a lot on makeup (Dior, Chanel) and perfume. And I will get a professional massage/facial every month or two, which I recognize is a total splurge.
We do spend on vacations/travel.
Combined we make a very comfortable HHI. (Low-to-mid six figures.)
Both my DH and I are spenders by nature but I manage the finances, and just approach it as I would a small business. I put on my MBA hat to manage our finances and recognize that I would much rather have cash in reserves than have had a bunch of BS experiences and things.
DP - you sound very sensible .
Re: folks critiquing your eating out 2-3 times a week at cheap eateries as not frugal - I am not a fan of the “gotcha” mentality of some on DCUM - nitpicking minor details and not seeing the bigger picture - your cost cutting measures spun sensible to me and balanced by a desire for sanity. Well done getting such a low mortgage in a good school district.
I often can’t make certain foods cheaper than you can buy them at lower prices eateries in the US so we do the same. Also you are both working and saving time counts .
I agree on need for cleaner and it being worth every penny.
I diverge though on spending a ton on makeup and shoes. Just the basics for me. But hey yiu save a ton by your house and car choices so you can afford that.
So I’m one of the “2-3 is not frugal” posters. I stand by that statement in that it is not particularly “cheap” of pp to eat out that often and that was her lead. The OP is asking what you are cheap about and this is not it. That doesn’t mean PP isn’t balancing well.
Why hyoer focus on one negative detail? She/he has a mortgage of $1600 a month in modest house in good school district and driving modest cars - saving herself tons of money - it smacked of gotcha !
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Food. We eat out maybe 2-3 times a week, and even then it's pretty basic (wings, Chinese). I also am vigilant about not wasting food and we eat simply at home unless it's a special occasion - lots of pasta, soup, sandwiches. I do splurge on sourdough from our local bakery - $7 a loaf!
We share a car and it is a non-luxury brand.
Clothes. I will occasionally get a nice dress from Nordstrom but only for a wedding or similar. Day to day my family wears clothes from TJ Maxx, Target, and Walmart (esp the kids). We also don't buy clothes that often. I do have a LOT of shoes - my weakness - but nothing designer. I've been using the same handbags for years.
Our house. We bought a small and not updated house and I have no interest in moving or expanding our existing space. Our mortgage is $1600 a month and we live in an excellent school district.
I do have cleaners. I consider it worth every penny.
I spend a lot on makeup (Dior, Chanel) and perfume. And I will get a professional massage/facial every month or two, which I recognize is a total splurge.
We do spend on vacations/travel.
Combined we make a very comfortable HHI. (Low-to-mid six figures.)
Both my DH and I are spenders by nature but I manage the finances, and just approach it as I would a small business. I put on my MBA hat to manage our finances and recognize that I would much rather have cash in reserves than have had a bunch of BS experiences and things.
Eating out 2-3 times a week is not frugal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't buy second hand anything. Definitely not clothes. But, I buy new clothes mostly from Costco, Kohls, Target, Macy's, Old Navy, TJ Maxx, Marshalls, Amazon, Lands End and Nordstrom Rack. I buy clothes on sale. If I buy something name brand, I will buy it on sale. Like buying NorthFace parkas on sale.
I do not buy souvenirs or mementos from my trips abroad. I only buy fridge magnets and anything that can be consumed quickly (chocolate, wine, snacks, cheese, coffee...).
I get a haircut every month, but I do all my beauty treatments at home from coloring my hair to skin treatments, waxing, mani pedi etc.
I host a lot and I hire a helper for the event but I cook all the food myself because I can control quality, taste and cost. (I am an excellent cook).
We do not have pets though we lavish love on our parents's dog. Pets cost a lot of money and also I cannot stand pet hair, smell and taking care of them.
I do not pay for lawn treatments. I have seeded clover on top of the existing grass, and reseed every year.
I buy my groceries from a number of stores. I am not store loyal at all. My favorite stores for groceries - Costco, Whole Foods, Great Wall (Chinese store), Patel Brothers (Indian store). I will visit Aldis, Target, Walmart, Traders Joe and Giant for miscellaneous grocery items. I buy wine in bulk from Costco in VA.
Wow. Your clothing shopping practices are horrible for the environment, esp. the shopping at Old Navy.
Lol what
DP, but I kind of agree. Now that I have money, I try to do better. I buy clothing made from sustainable materials and practices and not from sweatshops. This means I have to stick to a few known brands, or buy second hand when I really want something different.
To me, spending my money wisely on earth friendly and people friendly clothes is more important than saving a dollar. Now that I have money. Obviously, my calculus was different when I couldn't afford that