tvguy
Question anything the facts don't support.
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2003
- Messages
- 47,450
I checked Akron, Ohio, the tire Capital of the U.S for fun. Instead of $263 a tire, they only want $257!we can tell you live in California by them high prices.
I checked Akron, Ohio, the tire Capital of the U.S for fun. Instead of $263 a tire, they only want $257!we can tell you live in California by them high prices.
The two $25 gift cards from Walmart were bday gifts. I like Walmart because I shop there for food, hygiene products, toiletries, cleaning supplies and I can also use it at Sam’s club. When I do surveys I prefer Walmart cards over fast food or restaurant or target.I'm not a fan of store specific gift cards. What if another store has a better price? I'd just put everything in the bank to give you the flexibility to get the best deal.
No problem about tires. We have three cars so good info.@dreamin_disney : sorry to veer this thread off about tires, but have you figured out what you're going to do?
One easy way to save is if your employer can do a direct deposit into more than one account. Set up an online savings account (no fees) and have some money ($25, $50, $75, $100 [whatever you can afford]) diverted directly there as a savings account. The rest of your paycheck goes into your primary account that you pay the bills from.
Also, the "we" you speak about, is it just you and DD? Or you, DD, and SO/DH/DW? Cuz, that might create additional suggestions.
LolLOL. I would be very surprised if location made more than a few dollars difference. Any particular state of city I should check for a lower price.
I’m loving the tips and adviceThank you all. Please keep sharing.
my job might let us work from home , if they do $250 in gas savings a month
I replaced my water heater and van tires last year for under $600 each, but yes, definitely work on having a cushion if possible.
Wow, pretty sure my parents paid $1000+ for theirs a few years ago.
just my car is $225 not $250 a month for gas, my husband spends around $200 a month and my daughter??? She’s virtual and doesn’t go anywhere high covid numbers.Holy smoke, that is a lot of money for gas. I'm saving about $60 a month on gas working from home. Two tanks, 26 miles per day round trip in a car that gets about 20 mpg.
I realize how VERY lucky we have been.
I was furloughed but thanks to the extra $600 in Federal money, I made more in unemployment benefits the week I was off than I would have made working. With the latest stimulus we made an extra $3,600. My wife got a $500 bonus for "having to continue to come to work in the office" for the entire pandemic. After forcing us to take a week off without pay in the second quarter, we got a $1,000 Christmas bonus. But it was an election year and ad revenue was way up. With the gas savings we will have had about $6,000 in additional income in 2020 than we expected.
My money goes to DD’s college housing(but pretty much done unless she has to do in person student teaching but numbers are high but ya never know), toiletries, medical copays, exams, eye glasses, contacts, food,gas, household items.medical and eye insurance. My plan was once dd graduates the housing money would go toward my retirement , $100-200 towards mortgage, emergency fund and take on some 2-3 utility bills but hubby says worry about my retirement first.Wow, pretty sure my parents paid $1000+ for theirs a few years ago.
@dreamin_disney : does your salary go to help pay for the bills? Some of it? All of it? If only some of it and the rest is "fun money" then maybe you can save the "excess" to go towards building an emergency budget.
Like one of the other posters said, I don't think I would get gift cards for a specific store unless you're about to go spend it there (like get the gift card at the grocery store for gas rewards and credit card rewards and then turn around and spend the gift card the same day or within a week for items you were planning to purchase anyhow).
these take awhile but I only do it when I have timeOP- What surveys do you do? How do they pay out etc? (if you don't mind sharing)
I starting doing Survey Junkie last Feb (when I researched and verified they were for real) and I MADE myself do only $1.00 worth of surveys per day with the goal of doing at least $30-$31 a month. But they also offered incentives (like complete 3 surveys worth 10 point each for 7 days straight and get an extra 500 points). Point are equal to cents, so a 30 point survey for 5 mins is 30 cents made. I do them instead of scrolling FB or something else. Anyways, this past year I cashed out on the last day of each month and for 11 months I made $394.26. (yes, I had to look it up). I cashed it out to PayPal but you can also go e-gift cards or directly into you bank account. But again, in the beginning when I was trying to find survey companies I found alot that didn't pay out like they said they would so I was NOT about to put my banking info out there! LOL
I have a PayPal credit card and this extra $ is going towards vacay!
Yup. I could have gotten one with a 6 year warranty for $1,800. But got the next step up with a 10 year warranty. $290 of that was for the building permit. Code has changed since I put the previous water heater in. You have to have an expansion tank on them, that added $75 to the cost, the required earthquake straps added $25, and wiring in the shutoff box at the water heater was $100 of that. Only having an electrical shutoff at the break box is no longer to code, at least here.Lol
2000 dollars for a water heater?
$70 target gift cards will buy Tide, dish soap etc
I find out tomorrow if I will be able to work from home. With covid cases skyrocketing here and me being high risk I’m praying. Saving gas $$ will go into savings
Thanks for the reminderWe save a ton of money buying consumables like cleaning products an lawn care items from moving and estate sales. It makes us feel good to get products we use all the time cheap and keeps the them out of the trash. We keep a stockpile of extra products we use all the time so we’d we don’t have to go to the store very often.
We buy tools and hardware at sales so we can do most home repairs ourselves. It helps out a lot since we have lots of land to take care of.
we can tell you live in California by them high prices.