How about trying a "no grocery shopping" week? The objective is to buy the essentials like milk and bread the week before but then use only what's in your pantry, refrigerator and freezer to feed the family. You then put the weekly grocery money into savings. Depending on your normal grocery bill, this could add up to a significant amount of money if done over several months.
There are a lot of advantages to this.
- You get to clean out your freezer, frig and pantry without wasting food.
- You aren't making extra trips to the grocery store to purchase this or that and then buying several other things in the process.
- You save gas by not making multiple trips to the grocery store.
- Forces you to get creative with recipes. Who knows what new dishes you may discover in the process?
Turn off the air conditioner if you have one and open the windows. Do your laundry in cold water. Hang the clothes to dry. Turn off lights, TVs, appliances, etc. when not in use - even if it's only going to be 10 minutes. Combine errands into a single trip. Carpool. Walk when you can or take public transportation if available.
Make no new purchases except for emergenicies for a month. No new clothes no matter how great the sale is. No new electronics or technology (my own downfall). Do not renew magazine subscriptions when they come due. No new toys for the kids unless it's their birthday.
With Mother's Day and Father's Day coming up, ask for things that can be applied towards the vacation (gas cards, restaurant and hotel GCs, etc.). Or ask for something that you would have been purchasing anyway for the house. For your own parents, do something different like buying a flat of annuals at the farmer's market for Mom and planting them for her in the garden.
Eat out less, eat in more. Brown bag your leftovers and take them to work for lunch. Bring your own coffee instead of buying it at the coffee shop. Say goodbye to bottled water and drink the stuff that comes out of the tap. Try the generic and store brands of canned goods and frozen foods. Some of them are quite good. Others - well, kive & learn - read the "bagged cereal" thread from last week and you'll know what I mean.
Check into children's "turnabout" sales. A few of our local churches run them twice a year (spring & fall). You can sell your DD's clothing and kids' stuff there on consignment and you can also pick up some great bargains on gently worn clothing and toys that others have brought in. The church takes a small percentage of the price (which you set) and the rest goes to you. You can choose to donate any unsold items or pick them up when the sale is over.
There are probably a lot more ideas that others can offer as well. Good luck saving. It's so hard to do when you're "house poor" but DH & I were able to take the kids on their first Disney trip a year after building our house. It is possible if you really tighten your belt.