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How to save money in 2025.

How to save money in 2025.
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208 replies

  • Active Contributor
  • 7 replies
  • January 16, 2025

Buy within your means if possible.


  • New
 Contributor
  • 1 reply
  • January 17, 2025

Buy own brand products. The packaging might not be as pretty, but a lot of the time the quality of the product is indistinguishable from the more expensive options.

Additionally, if you don't have loyalty cards for the places you shop at - get them! Perhaps they take up space in your wallet, but who cares - they save you money. 

Finally, check the price per gram/kg/ml etc of products to get the best value.


  • Active Contributor
  • 6 replies
  • January 17, 2025

When buying electrical & tech items, I always check out refurbished sites. I've saved literally hundreds of pounds on things like a Dyson vacuum cleaner, headphones, steam cleaner, coffee machine and DSLR camera. The trade-off is usually a shorter guarantee period (typically 12 months instead of 2 years). At the end of the day you can still search for, and buy, a brand new item but I've yet to be let down by any of the refurbished products I've bought.


  • New
 Contributor
  • 2 replies
  • January 18, 2025

Inside of heating the whole house I just use a heated plug in blanket and have that over me in the living room. 
it can be put on a timer and different heat settings and heats just me and I’m toasty and warm. And at costs 6-7p an hour. 


  • New
 Contributor
  • 2 replies
  • January 18, 2025

Instead of heating the whole house just heat yourself  
takes a lot of heat to heat a house and your still cold. 
 

I just use a heated plug in blanket and have that over me in the living room. 
it can be put on a timer and different heat settings and heats just me and I’m toasty and warm. And at costs of 6-7p an hour it’s a bargain 


jamesinealing
New
 Contributor
  • New
 Contributor
  • 2 replies
  • January 18, 2025

Track all your bills and compare them year on year. We reduced our energy consumption by 40% by seeing what reduced costs and then making changes (in our case reducing the hours the heating and especially hot water were on)


  • Active Contributor
  • 5 replies
  • January 18, 2025

Activate Round Ups on your bank account where when you use your debit card to make a purchase it rounds the price up to the nearest pound and places that amount into one of your savings accounts, i.e. you buy an item for £1.90, and 10p will be deposited into your savings account.

 

Something else I have done in the past was whenever I was given some change, either £1 or £2 coins, I would not spend them, but saved them in a jar. You would be surprised how quickly it can add up. 


Roy Everitt
Active Contributor
  • Active Contributor
  • 18 replies
  • January 19, 2025

Emptying your car boot of stuff you dont need and only filling your fuel tank to half full instead of full decreases the overall weight of your car which in turn means your car engine does not have to work so hard when driving which means you use less fuel which means you have to fill up less often.

Also when you drive try to use a higher gear than you would do normally and try to accelerate gently and brake gently as this can also mean your car engine has to work less hard than normal.

These changes could potentially save you hundreds of pounds over a course of a year, (depending on how often you use your car and how far you travel in your car)