For many, building a stockpile means buying lots of bottled water, batteries, and canned food in preparation for a snow storm or natural disaster. For couponers, it means never having to pay full price again.
stock·pile – A supply stored for future use, usually carefully accrued and maintained.
A stockpile is simply buying more than what you need for immediate use when prices are extremely low, so that you do not have to pay full price in the future. A stockpile can be a key part of saving money!
Here are my tips for stockpiling:
To start a stockpile you will need multiple coupons for any given product that you plan to stockpile. In order to get multiple coupons, you will need to get your hands on multiple newspapers/circulars or sign up for coupon sources under multiple email addresses. You can also collect coupons from friends and family who don’t plan to use the coupons themselves. Four of each coupon is a good place to start, but you can do more in the beginning when building your stockpile.
When items go on sale at a deep discount, that is when you want to use all your coupons. Say, for instance, that pasta has gone on sale for $1, you have a $0.25 coupon and your store will triple coupons. That makes the pasta just $0.25 [$1 – ($0.25 x 3)], which is a great price. So, if you have four $0.25 coupons then you could buy four boxes and pay just $0.25 per box! Of course, you may not need all four boxes this week or even next week, but if you eat pasta regularly then you will use them eventually. This way, you get to pay a rock bottom price for pasta and you won’t have to pay full price for it the next time you need it. In most cases, you should have enough to last you until the next time it goes on sale!
Stores run sales in cycles. Everything typically goes on sale about every 8 – 12 weeks. If you buy 8 – 12 weeks worth of everything when it goes on sale, then you will have enough to last you until the next time it goes on sale. If your family eats one box of cereal per week, then go ahead and buy several boxes. If your family only eats one box a month, then maybe just buy a couple boxes.
It is very important that you only stockpile foods and products that you know your family will actually use. Don’t buy 10 boxes of cereal that your family has never tried before or it may never get eaten. If your husband does not like a certain brand of deodorant, don’t stockpile that brand, even if it’s FREE. Yes, I just told you not to get something if it’s free. If you won’t use it, what’s the point? By buying it you are just preventing someone who could actually use it from buying it and taking up valuable storage space in your own home.
You have to keep an eye on expiration dates when you stockpile. It is very important to rotate your stockpile. That means you need to put the new items you purchase at the back and keep the oldest products at the front where you can get to them. Keep in mind that even toothpaste expires! It takes a long time, but if you look at the tube, there actually is an expiration date on there.
It’s very tempting to buy tons and tons of products – especially when they’re free. Please remember the 8 – 12 week sales cycle. It WILL go on sale again! You don’t have to buy 50 tubes of toothpaste right now. Buy a few now, then buy a few again the next time it goes on sale. If you realize you’ve accumulated too many tubes, skip a few sales. Save your gas, energy, space, and time.
If you build a stockpile and carefully maintain it you can save a lot of money and always have your favorite products on hand! No more running to the store at 10 pm because you’ve run out of shampoo!
Do you stockpile? Let me know what your go-to stockpile products are!
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View Comments
This is great in theory, but doesn't work in real life. Very few, if any, stores double or triple coupons these days, so the biggest savings part of this picture no longer exists.
No one in utah triples or doubles coupons so how would the couponing work without that
I’m with you there.....and also would like to know any tricks or techniques. Thank you
Stockpiles are the best!
I need to build up my stockpile again now that we are settled in our new house.
So comforting having a nice stockpile. ;-)
We love to stockpile our favorite ingredients - my hubby found his favorite spaghetti sauce on clearance, so bought lots of jars as we never see this sauce on sale!
I want to learn to stockpile! Thanks for this! :)
So what if your local grocery stores don't double or triple coupons and your newspaper is 3 dollars each? Any suggestions for that?
I was wondering if you had a way to help a newbie with a list of items that could be good to stock up on. I am searching for a way to keep an itemized list of what I have, what I need and what I donate for tax purposes but I am having a hard time finding a template.
Great tips - we can all get a little carried away. When we start stockpiling stuff that we don't need and will probably never use - it hurts us emotionally and financially.