Renters: Save Money on Doing Laundry

If you rent a house or apartment, chances are you spend quite a bit of time at the local laundromat washing your clothes. Most units don’t have their own washing machines, so you probably have to drag your bags of clothes back and forth each week. And in addition to all the time it takes up, using the laundromat can also cost quite a bit of money, depending on how big your household is. Laundry gets expensive, and in these tough economic times you are probably looking for ways to save money on doing laundry, right? I have made some changes to my laundry routine which really saves me some serious cash over the course of a year of doing laundry. Hopefully some of these tips can help you save money on doing laundry, too!

Save Money on Doing Laundry

  • Only do full loads. Yes, I know most people already know this, but make sure you stick to it. Spending money on a half-full washing machine load is not only wasteful of water, but of your hard-earned cash, too.
  • Use the big machines. Laundromats have the regular-sized machines and they have the gigantic ones. Use the gigantic ones when you can. They cost more to run a load thru but you can fit more clothes in them, saving you from doing multiple loads in a smaller machine – which saves you money over the long run.
  • Skip the drying. If you have access to outdoor space, and it’s not against the law where you live, consider packing up your freshly-washed wet clothes and bringing them home to dry. Line drying is free, uses no fossil fuels, and helps your clothes last longer.
  • Wash your clothes in cold. Speaking of clothes lasting longer, washing in cold water helps too. And having clothes last longer saves you from having new clothes too often, saving you money.
  • Watch for discount days. Many laundromats have discount days or times, which they publicize to try to get people in during their slower times. Take advantage of the savings they offer if you can manage it.

Save Money on Laundry Supplies

  • Use less detergent. The laundry detergent companies tell you to use way more per load than you actually need to use. Cut that amount in half and your clothes will come out just as clean while also saving you a substantial amount of money on detergent.
  • Make your own detergent. Want to save even more? Make your own laundry detergent and spend just pennies per load. Making it yourself usually results in a better product that costs a fraction of the store-bought brands do.
  • Skip the dryer sheets & fabric softeners. These are completely unnecessary, wasteful, and expensive. Try a few loads without either, you won’t even miss them.
  • Search for coupons on detergent. If you don’t want to make your own detergent, at least try to get the best price on what you do buy. While I recommend an eco-friendly brand like Seventh Generation if you buy detergent, coupons can easily be found for lower-priced detergents online and in circulars.

While everyone knows that having to do laundry at a laundromat can be a pain, there is no reason you should also be emptying your wallet when doing so. By using some of these tips, you can easily save money on doing laundry – and maybe use the savings to buy a washing machine of your own. Do you have tips that help you save money on doing laundry? Please weigh in and let us know!

Simplify and Save Money With Amazon Subscribe & Save

I am all about automating as much of my life as possible. My bills are paid automatically, payments are sent to my credit card automatically, and I have my Netflix queue full of at least 100 movies so that I don’t have to think about it for extended periods of time. The latest way I have discovered to simplify things around here is to start buying the standard items we constantly need via Amazon’s Subscribe & Save service.

subandsave Simplify and Save Money With Amazon Subscribe & Save

Just this morning I signed up for yet another item to be delivered every two months automatically — a daily vitamin supplement that we both take. Each bottle contains 120 pills, which means that it lasts us two months. We had been buying it at Whole Foods at first, thinking that was the only place we could get it. Then I decided to check Amazon and wow — it was 50% less than what Whole Foods wanted me to pay. Score! Throw in the free shipping and the no taxes, and this supplement just became a lot cheaper to take every day. But wait, it gets even better — when you sign up to have a product delivered automatically on a schedule, you save an additional 15%. How great is that? What was $49.99/bottle at WF is now $21/bottle!

Not every product is available in the Subscribe & Save section of Amazon’s site, but there are a ton of things in there that chances are you buy on a regular basis at your regular grocery store. Once you sign up, you select how often you want the item delivered and you are billed automatically each time it ships. I mark each delivery date on my calendar so I can skip, move, or delete a delivery of something I may not need right away, but usually the few things I do buy from them come right on time as I am running out. You can cancel at any time, but once you find out how much this helps to simplify part of your life, chances are you won’t. It certainly has made my life a little easier as I no longer have to worry about going without of some of our household standards!

What’s Old Is New Again.

As most of you guys know, I have been away for a few weeks visiting family and friends. One of the groups of people that I visited are my friends in Colorado, where I stayed for a night both heading to the east coast and returning here to New Mexico. The guy is my best friend since childhood, and he has a great wife and 2 small children ages 4 and 2 who I truly enjoy spending time with. Most of you also know that I spent a lot of my time away cleaning out family clutter, and this is where I get to the point of the title of this post – “What’s Old Is New Again“. While helping my mom clean out her attic, I came across a bunch of boxes full of my toys from when I was a little kid – everything from GI Joe’s to Legos To Fischer-Price cars, trucks, and airplanes. (I won’t talk about my baseball card collection that was also up there, which obviously needs to be gone through for hidden gems!) Some of the toys headed straight to the landfill because they were beyond help, but many of them were in perfectly fine condition after a quick wipedown with a rag – and that’s when I decided I would pack up a bunch of them and bring them to my favorite “niece & nephew” in Denver. I called their parents to get their permission first, and I even sent them this picture of some of the toys laid out on the carpet, so they could see what was coming to their house:

toys Whats Old Is New Again.

Almost immediately, my friend replied with “Wow – I remember those toys from when we were kids! Yes, bring them on over!” And so I did – and proceeded to play Santa for a day while giving these kids a giant box of “new to them” toys. They had so much fun taking out all these “new” toys, giving each one a once or twice over, and then proceeding to choose favorites. When we went to dinner, they had to bring a new toy with them. When we went to the movie in the park that night, they had to bring a few with them. This was an exciting day – tons of new toys on a random day that wasn’t their birthday or Christmas! To them, these were new items, while to my friend and I they were a grand memory from 30+ years ago. Solidly built and protected from the elements, they didn’t look too worse for the wear at all, and these kids will get years of entertainment out of all this stuff. And it was all free! My friend even told me he will keep them for when (if) I ever have kids, so hopefully they will get another use again someday down the road. It felt really good to see toys from so long ago being played with as if they had just been taken out of the boxes that morning – it just goes to show you that kids can be VERY happy with almost anything you give them, and they don’t need the latest and greatest new cheaply made toy every other week that will probably break within the year!