RichieTruxillo
Writing Prescriptions for Disney Vacations
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2008
- Messages
- 265
I thought it'd be a good idea to keep myself and others motivated to save for Disney. Let's brainstorm some ways to save money (and or generate money) to goto Disney again. Post your current vacation savings in your signature or somewhere on this thread. No referral links as they ban you around these parts for them.
Here is an ongoing list of ways of saving money or generating money for your Disney Trip. This is all from the perspective of someone with 300k in student loans to pay off on a residency salary (around minimum wage for hours worked). Pretty much I have a savings account used for trips the past 4 years. I do little things that add up and set deposits to go into that account. My goal is to go on a 7 day Disney Vacation with my wife, with park hopper/water park/Universal passes for 7 days. We would like to stay at the Polynesian or the Grand Floridian if possible. The cat is out of the bag though, so now she knows. She reads everything I post hahaha
Richie's Master List of Ways to Save Money for your Next Disney Trip - Version 2.2 - updated 2/5/2011 -
#1: Spare Change. Yes, everytime you go out to eat and end up with change, put it in a bottle for safe keeping. Every 3 months, go deposit it into the savings account you setup. Last time I checked, I had a whopping 44 bucks in change laying around. (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#2: Ebay: I sell all of my games and books I don't use on ebay. It too, ads up. I got 150 bucks for an old Super Nintendo game that was lying around recently (which had to go for closing costs on our new home) (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#3: Tax Return: Enough said. Being a homeowner this year is going to help with the interest deductions. (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#4: Blogging for dollars. I make money on the side by monetizing my website blogs with google Adsense ads. The best part is that you can get a free blog and webhosting for free at Blogger.com now. The downside to this is that you have to make $100 bucks to get your first check and it starts out slow. It builds up over time though, takes about 3 months to get decent money rolling in. (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#5: Getting Paid to Surf the internet with Yahoo: Can get paid 3-5 cents a search with Yahoo search engine using a service located in the United Kingdom. Have been paid out three times now to my Paypal account.
#6: Chase Disney Rewards Credit Card - 1% on all purchases towards a disney vacation. You need to be very wise in how you charge. Pay off the entire balance every month to avoid finance charges. (Credit to: Anne's Family)
#7: Can Recycling: 5 cents to 10 cents a can in your state depending on your Recycling program and your weekly soda/beer consumption. (Credit to: stahshee)
#8: Rounding off your bank transactions:
#9: Sunshine Rewards: A website that pays you for completing offers online with select merchants. Free to join. Has an option to payout with Disney Gift Cards. Note that you will be required to accept offers and try services for at least 3 days to receive proper credit for doing so. (Credit to: Redwitch and tcmata)
#10: PayPerPost - A website that allows you to make money blogging for companies. Payouts from 3-20 dollars a post. You must be able to comply with the bidder's conditions and it is advantageous to have your own .com, .net or .org website for your blog to maximize payouts. (Credit: bellebuzzandpooh )
#11: Free AntiVirus Software: Stop paying 50 dollars a year for inferior products, get AVG free edition by clicking here. (Credit: RichieTruxillo) You can also get AVAST Antivirus free edition for...free at AVAST Antivirus free edition
#12: Kidzeyes: A company that pays your kids, ages 6-12, money for filling out product surveys. According to the FAQ, they can never release and personally identifiable information on your children, and they will try to sell them something. It is strictly for market research. 1 point equals 1 cent and minimum balance payout is at $10 (1000 points). Kids can exchange points for money or prizes like a Nintendo DS or a playstation 2. Of course, you want the money for your Disney savings account though.
Might be a good way to motivate kids and simultaneously teach them some rudimentary computer and reading skills. (Credit: Terry36)
#13: Opening an Ebay Affiliate Store: By request of members. Did you know you can get paid by Ebay without ever having to move any inventory? It's called the Ebay Partner Network, an affiliate program setup by Ebay. The easiest way I've found to do this is to use a software package that builds a niche store for you with minimal fuss. Every time, someone clicks on a link in your store and wins an auction in the next 7 days, you receive 50% of Ebay's revenue on that transaction. The short version is this: $109 total startup cost for one website. Each additional website costs $7.95 for the .com registration if you use the coupon codes located in my blog post. Ebay Partner Network pays out every 30 days regardless of account balance via direct deposit. Note that this is really for those of you who have time to invest in a project and want to learn about the intricacies of the internet. As you can see, nothing special, but the software automagically sets up the necessary databases for me so all I had to do was find categories and search queries for the menu bar. Once setup, the site automatically streams new auctions to your menus, providing you with fresh, auto-updated auction content. I suggest you narrow your product niche when you get started. It is hard to get a website indexed in a competitive niche like "Wedding." (Credit: RichieTruxillo) UPDATE: Making 250-300 bucks a month with 8 sites now for the past 22 months, havent touched most of them in months too. Ideally takes about 10 hours a week or so to make work, might take longer for those who know zero about web programming but still doable if you read the manual. Hard for me to do working 80 hours a week currently but doable if you stay at home. Unfortunately, most of the money made going toward bills like gas and study materials for residency.
#14: Rebate Money: There are so many items that you can get for free or very little after rebate. Even if it's an item that you cannot use yourself, you can sell it at a yard sale for a few dollars and actually make a little money on it. If it's something that you can use, then getting that money back is a bonus. Some things that really work well for rebating are the monthly deals at Walgreen's and Rite Aid. If it's free after rebate and you've got a coupon, you can actually make a few bucks on it. And both programs allow you to enter your receipts online. No more saving receipts and mailing them at the end of the month. It's not a lot of money but over time, it adds up. (Credit: aka-madforthemouse )
UPDATE: Gotten back about 75 bucks in rebates, just have to really be vigilant about it.
#15:
30 bucks here and there ads up, trust me. Life is short, save up and go on trips! So if you have any more tips to add or just want to start holding yourself accountable for feeding the vacation piggybank, then please post them here. Let's get back to Disney World!
If you enjoyed this thread, please 5 star it.
-Richie
P.S. I just got back from Disney in May. Love my Pirate Hat. Got it embroidered! Makes me want to go back even more
UPDATED: Booked a 7-day Disney Vacation for the wife and myself at the Polynesian finally! Two years in the making but we got there! Save up my friends Save up!
Here is an ongoing list of ways of saving money or generating money for your Disney Trip. This is all from the perspective of someone with 300k in student loans to pay off on a residency salary (around minimum wage for hours worked). Pretty much I have a savings account used for trips the past 4 years. I do little things that add up and set deposits to go into that account. My goal is to go on a 7 day Disney Vacation with my wife, with park hopper/water park/Universal passes for 7 days. We would like to stay at the Polynesian or the Grand Floridian if possible. The cat is out of the bag though, so now she knows. She reads everything I post hahaha

Richie's Master List of Ways to Save Money for your Next Disney Trip - Version 2.2 - updated 2/5/2011 -
#1: Spare Change. Yes, everytime you go out to eat and end up with change, put it in a bottle for safe keeping. Every 3 months, go deposit it into the savings account you setup. Last time I checked, I had a whopping 44 bucks in change laying around. (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#2: Ebay: I sell all of my games and books I don't use on ebay. It too, ads up. I got 150 bucks for an old Super Nintendo game that was lying around recently (which had to go for closing costs on our new home) (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#3: Tax Return: Enough said. Being a homeowner this year is going to help with the interest deductions. (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#4: Blogging for dollars. I make money on the side by monetizing my website blogs with google Adsense ads. The best part is that you can get a free blog and webhosting for free at Blogger.com now. The downside to this is that you have to make $100 bucks to get your first check and it starts out slow. It builds up over time though, takes about 3 months to get decent money rolling in. (Credit: RichieTruxillo)
#5: Getting Paid to Surf the internet with Yahoo: Can get paid 3-5 cents a search with Yahoo search engine using a service located in the United Kingdom. Have been paid out three times now to my Paypal account.
#6: Chase Disney Rewards Credit Card - 1% on all purchases towards a disney vacation. You need to be very wise in how you charge. Pay off the entire balance every month to avoid finance charges. (Credit to: Anne's Family)
#7: Can Recycling: 5 cents to 10 cents a can in your state depending on your Recycling program and your weekly soda/beer consumption. (Credit to: stahshee)
#8: Rounding off your bank transactions:
From Grumpy'sWife4Ever: my brilliant DH came across an easy way to save that is almost painless and best of all it WORKS -
Instead of keeping a check register, we now keep one of those accountant-type books with the double columns (cheap in any stationary store) In one column he keeps track of our spending, but he rounds every transaction up by one dollar. That money just kind of "disappears" into our checking, it is kind of like it is no longer there. In the other column, he keeps track of our expenses in real dollars. When the columns get to be a few hundred dollars different, he transfers the "extra" over to savings and we start all over.
Genius, eh? You would be surprised how many transactions a family makes in a single month - the $1 here and there adds up fast!
#9: Sunshine Rewards: A website that pays you for completing offers online with select merchants. Free to join. Has an option to payout with Disney Gift Cards. Note that you will be required to accept offers and try services for at least 3 days to receive proper credit for doing so. (Credit to: Redwitch and tcmata)
#10: PayPerPost - A website that allows you to make money blogging for companies. Payouts from 3-20 dollars a post. You must be able to comply with the bidder's conditions and it is advantageous to have your own .com, .net or .org website for your blog to maximize payouts. (Credit: bellebuzzandpooh )
#11: Free AntiVirus Software: Stop paying 50 dollars a year for inferior products, get AVG free edition by clicking here. (Credit: RichieTruxillo) You can also get AVAST Antivirus free edition for...free at AVAST Antivirus free edition
#12: Kidzeyes: A company that pays your kids, ages 6-12, money for filling out product surveys. According to the FAQ, they can never release and personally identifiable information on your children, and they will try to sell them something. It is strictly for market research. 1 point equals 1 cent and minimum balance payout is at $10 (1000 points). Kids can exchange points for money or prizes like a Nintendo DS or a playstation 2. Of course, you want the money for your Disney savings account though.

#13: Opening an Ebay Affiliate Store: By request of members. Did you know you can get paid by Ebay without ever having to move any inventory? It's called the Ebay Partner Network, an affiliate program setup by Ebay. The easiest way I've found to do this is to use a software package that builds a niche store for you with minimal fuss. Every time, someone clicks on a link in your store and wins an auction in the next 7 days, you receive 50% of Ebay's revenue on that transaction. The short version is this: $109 total startup cost for one website. Each additional website costs $7.95 for the .com registration if you use the coupon codes located in my blog post. Ebay Partner Network pays out every 30 days regardless of account balance via direct deposit. Note that this is really for those of you who have time to invest in a project and want to learn about the intricacies of the internet. As you can see, nothing special, but the software automagically sets up the necessary databases for me so all I had to do was find categories and search queries for the menu bar. Once setup, the site automatically streams new auctions to your menus, providing you with fresh, auto-updated auction content. I suggest you narrow your product niche when you get started. It is hard to get a website indexed in a competitive niche like "Wedding." (Credit: RichieTruxillo) UPDATE: Making 250-300 bucks a month with 8 sites now for the past 22 months, havent touched most of them in months too. Ideally takes about 10 hours a week or so to make work, might take longer for those who know zero about web programming but still doable if you read the manual. Hard for me to do working 80 hours a week currently but doable if you stay at home. Unfortunately, most of the money made going toward bills like gas and study materials for residency.
#14: Rebate Money: There are so many items that you can get for free or very little after rebate. Even if it's an item that you cannot use yourself, you can sell it at a yard sale for a few dollars and actually make a little money on it. If it's something that you can use, then getting that money back is a bonus. Some things that really work well for rebating are the monthly deals at Walgreen's and Rite Aid. If it's free after rebate and you've got a coupon, you can actually make a few bucks on it. And both programs allow you to enter your receipts online. No more saving receipts and mailing them at the end of the month. It's not a lot of money but over time, it adds up. (Credit: aka-madforthemouse )
UPDATE: Gotten back about 75 bucks in rebates, just have to really be vigilant about it.
#15:
30 bucks here and there ads up, trust me. Life is short, save up and go on trips! So if you have any more tips to add or just want to start holding yourself accountable for feeding the vacation piggybank, then please post them here. Let's get back to Disney World!

-Richie
P.S. I just got back from Disney in May. Love my Pirate Hat. Got it embroidered! Makes me want to go back even more

UPDATED: Booked a 7-day Disney Vacation for the wife and myself at the Polynesian finally! Two years in the making but we got there! Save up my friends Save up!