Frugal living isn’t only about living cheaply. It’s about learning a lifestyle and focusing your money on goals rather than the immediate gratification of wants. After compiling the best tips from seasoned practitioners of frugal living, here are the top strategies worth adopting. Know the Difference Between Need and Want Knowing the difference between what you need and what you want is essential to saving money, but the key is not to sacrifice all your wants. Depriving yourself entirely will only cause you to binge once you have a little extra income. The smarter approach: know when you want to treat yourself, and when you do, make it count. Learn To Cook Eating out can add up fast. Learning to cook a few recipes you would regularly order out, well enough that you no longer feel the need to, removes both the expense and the hassle. Eating at home more and out less is one of the simplest ways to keep money in your pocket. Want to start meal planning? It’s easier than you think! Grab this free meal planner and shopping list and get your food budget under control! Live Below Your Means Living below your means is simply affording the more lavish option but choosing the less expensive one. It’s solid advice at any age. One trap many people fall into is automatically upgrading their standard of living as their income grows. Resisting that impulse is where the real financial leverage lives. Read More: How To Live Below Your Means: Mastering the Art of Financial Discipline Pay Yourself First Automatically save a percentage of each paycheck in a savings account. Start small, 5% is a manageable place to begin, then increase that percentage every few months as long as you’re not struggling. Life happens, and being prepared requires proper money management built into your routine before spending begins. Read More: How To Pay Yourself First Learn Value Over Price Sometimes, aiming for value over price matters more than finding the lowest number on a tag. A pair of shoes that costs more but lasts longer saves more money than a cheap pair that needs replacing a few months down the road. Thinking long-term about purchases is a cornerstone of frugal living done right. Cancel Recurring Subscriptions Recurring fees are easy to underestimate. Streaming services, apps, and memberships can seem minor at $5 or $10 each, until you’re subscribed to several and the total quietly exceeds $100 a month. Audit subscriptions regularly, consider subscribing to one service at a time, watch what you want, then cancel and switch to another. Socialize at Home Going out for drinks or dinner with friends can quietly drain a budget. Instead, try hosting gatherings at home and taking turns with friends so the cost doesn’t always fall on one person. It’s entirely possible to maintain an active social life while redefining it to suit your financial needs. Open a Roth IRA Opening a Roth IRA as early as possible and funding it

There’s nothing quite like returning from a big trip, finally unpacking your suitcases, and reflecting on the memories you just made. Whether it’s looking back at photos from a recent family getaway to Hawaii or plotting out the itinerary for an upcoming cruise, reliving those adventures is half the fun of traveling in the first place. But as your list of destinations grows, remembering exactly where you stayed, what you did, and when you were […]

Life is uncertain. We are living our day-to-day lives with a certain level of uncertainty, but that’s part of the fun. Some people don’t like having too many uncertainties, so they take actions and precautions … Read more

There is no shortage of budgeting apps in today’s fintech world, all with different features and focuses. In this honest review, we’ll examine two popular ones: YNAB and Rocket Money. Both apps focus on budgeting and cash flow management, but their purposes and ideal use cases differ significantly. Let’s look at the individual features of each app to see if we can decide on a clear winner (spoiler alert: we think there is!). What is […]

Spring is here, which means graduation season is right around the corner. High school and college students are preparing to walk across the stage and start a new chapter. I still remember my graduation back in 2008. My family came to Savannah to celebrate, and that moment felt like the beginning of everything. That…

What happens when you’ve achieved the financial success you once dreamed of, but something inside you starts asking for more or different? In this episode, I sit down with Tiffany Aliche, also known as The Budgetnista, for a real and layered conversation about evolution, grief, purpose, and what it looks like to transition into a new season of life. Tiffany shares her journey from being in deep debt and rebuilding her life from scratch to […]

With rugged coastlines, charming small towns, and some of the most accessible whale watching in the world, Newfoundland and Labrador is a dream destination for nature lovers and first-time visitors. The key? Knowing how to plan ahead so you can make the most of your time here. If you’re dreaming of visiting Canada’s eastern edge, […] The post How to Plan a Trip to Newfoundland (What to Book First + Mistakes to Avoid) appeared first […]

You are probably overpaying for electricity right now. We’re talking $100 to $200+ annually just thrown away. For typical families, that’s real money. The fix? Five minutes. Here is why 63% of Singapore households are still throwing money away on SP Group’s default price plan, and how to stop being one of them. The electricity […] The post Best Electricity Plans In Singapore (2026) appeared first on Turtle Investor.

May is here! Is your budget done? Take a quick look at these potential expenses. See if you need to add any of them to your May budget before we get any further into the month. The post DO YOU NEED THESE EXPENSES IN YOUR MAY BUDGET? appeared first on a life on a dime.

A durable retirement income plan is not just about generating income. It is about making a series of interconnected decisions that must hold up over decades. It needs to provide reliable cash flow, manage risks such as market volatility and longevity risk, preserve flexibility as circumstances change, and support long-term goals like leaving a legacy. In practice, the difference between a plan that looks good on paper and one that actually holds up often comes down to […]

Stop. I know you read this title and attempted to turn and flee back out the door. I anticipated this and caught you by the back of your shirt. We need to talk about this now. If you’re reading this blog, you’re likely Millennial or Gen Z. They’re the largest pie slice of animal lovers—one in three owns a pet. And our attitudes about pets are really intense. Half of us describe loving them more than our own mothers. And all of those pets are doing the absolute worst thing any pet can do: getting old without us. You likely won’t have experience with being solely, directly responsible for managing a living being’s decline and death. So we’re going to explain what’s gonna happen, and give you our very best insights. I promise to make this discussion as brief, honest, and detached as possible. We’ve written maudlin tear-jerkers about pets before, and I swear this won’t be one of those. But this is a subject that’s sadly present for both of us right now. Life’s given us lemons recently; this guide will be the lemonade. We want to give some guidance to the people who will one day face the same challenge, so they can feel prepared. All of this advice comes straight from our hearts. At the end, there’s a handy checklist for your convenience. If you do everything on it, you’ll be as ready as you can be for the end of your pet’s life. Many of them are actions you can start taking long before your pet gets grey around the muzzle, so don’t put off reading it. This article was originally written when Jess and I were both navigating the end of a pet’s life. Life simultaneously gave us lemons; this guide was the lemonade we offered to you! Because this has remained one of our most shared articles of all time, we’ve decided to present it again in both audio and video formats, to make it as accessible as possible. It has been lightly expanded since its original publication, integrating some great comments and feedback we got from readers, including both pet owners and veterinary professionals. [embed]https://youtube.com/watch?v=7Hch8ga9xTk&version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en-US&autohide=2&wmode=transparent[/embed] Why does this feel so hard? If you read this blog, you’re likely Gen Z or Millennial. They’re the largest pie slice of animal lovers—one in three owns a pet. And our attitudes about pets are really intense. Half of us describe loving them more than our own mothers! And all of those pets are doing the absolute worst thing any pet can do: getting older faster than us. A lot of our readers are too young to have experienced being solely, directly responsible for managing a living being’s decline and

Your budget doesn’t need perfection. It needs consistency that bends when life does. If you’ve ever felt like budgeting only works when everything else in life is calm and predictable—this article is for you. Here’s how to stay grounded in your money plan even in the chaos. The post How to Stay Consistent With Your Budget—Even When Life Gets Messy appeared first on The Budget Mom.

When I was younger, I had a simple budgeting strategy for making decisions. I called it my trifecta theory. If something checked three boxes… Financially smart, Personally beneficial, and Efficient …I was in. If it only checked two? Still good. That was a “duofecta.” At the time, I didn’t think of it as one of my budgeting strategies—but that’s exactly what it was. However, I found it doesn’t work the same now as it did […]