Sunday, July 10, 2011

TWDTWC 07/10/2011

Welcome, dear reader, to the first installment of This Week's Deals This Week's Coupons.  Only one of this week's drugstore freebies involves a coupon from this week's paper.  The rest are free without coupons, or are free after an internet printable coupon.

CVS:

Balance Bar $1.69, get $1.69 ECB, limit 1 ~~ no coupon required

Complete multipurpose solution, 12 oz, $7.99, get $7.99 ECB, limit 1 ~~no coupon required

The ad also states that the magic coupon machine will spit out a $3 off $10 worth of pain relievers coupon.  There are some pain relievers on sale, and I would highly recommend having a look in that aisle to see if there are any peelie coupons on the products that might score you a great deal.

They're also doing the $10 gas card when you buy $30 worth of qualifying stuff, but none of the qualifying stuff is free and much of it isn't really a good deal.

Rite Aid:

Crest Pro-Health Enamel Shield Toothpaste, 4.2 oz, $2.69, submit for $2.69 SCR, limit 1 ~~no coupon required (though if you have last week's P&G, you can make this a money maker)

Compound W Freeze Off or Warmer Freezing Wart Remover, $10.99, submit for $10.00 SCR, limit 1 ~~$1 off IP HERE or $2 off IP HERE

Noxzema disposable razors, 3 to 4 count, $2 ~~$2 coupon from this week's RP

Walgreens:

GUM 2 pack micro or super tip toothbrushes, or floss 200 yards, $2, get $2 RR ~~no coupon required

Hyland's teething gel, 0.5 oz, $5, get $5 RR ~~no coupon required but you can print this $2 IP HERE and make it a money maker.

W Women's 6 blade razor system, $3.99, get $3.99 RR ~~no coupon required

Happy saving!

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Let the reader beware

Disclaimer:

I post deals based on the coupons available to me in my local paper (Raleigh, NC's News and Observer) and the ads available in my area.  There are regional differences in both coupons and sales.  My local CVS and your local CVS may both have a sale on soda, but mine may be Pepsi and your's may be Coke.  My local CVS may have a sale on toothpaste for $2.77, and your local CVS may have the same toothpaste on sale for $2.99.  My Sunday insert may have a coupon for 50 cents off that toothpaste, your's may have 75 cents off, or $1 off 2, or no coupon for the toothpaste at all.  Check your local inserts and ads to verify you can get the same deals I can before you go shopping.

Where to begin? Right here!

My cousin and I swap coupons and deal information.  It seems that almost every Sunday I get a phone call or a Facebook message about this weeks coupons and deals.  I don't mind at all.  First, I really like her so an opportunity to chat is never unwelcome.  Second, talking deals is one of my favorite things to do.

I've been posting to Facebook about playing the drugstore game, and about the deals I get for a while now on my own page.  I think it was a comment by one of her friends on one of her posts that reminded me just how overwhelming it can be to start couponing.

So that got me thinking.  I remember being a new couponer, bemoaning the sea of deals I could not do.  Sure, there are deal match ups to view online, but what if you don't have 6 months worth of coupons to draw from?  There are lots of places online that do the deal matching for you, but how many focus on this week's deals with this week's coupons?  None that I know of.

I can do that.

I am pleased to announce a new feature, effective immediately.

This week's deals, this week's coupons.
Every week I will match up the current week's coupons with the current week's drugstore deals, and post what are, in my opinion, the best deals.  I will post the money makers and freebies I find, and any other really good deals using the coupons immediately available at the end of your driveway or at the local corner store.

There is no better motivation when you start on your personal road to savings than a little success.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Baby frugal - feeding for less

Let's look at baby formula.  My baby drinks Enfamil.  The doctor gave us a sample of the Newborn formulation, the manufacturer sent us a sample of the Newborn formulation.  He didn't like the Similac, so Enfamil Newborn it is.

A quick cost comparison of the different ways it is available, powder, ready to feed and concentrate, reveals, almost every time, that buying the powder is the least expensive way, per ounce of prepared formula, to buy it.

The powder comes in 3 sizes.  A small coffee can size, a larger reuseable plastic tub in the 22-24 oz range (depending on the formulation), and refill packs for the large tub which contain 2 pouches.  Oddly, the refill pouches are not the same size as the insert that comes in a new tub.  They are substantially smaller.

If you take the cost of the container and divide by the number of prepared ounces it should make, you will get your unit cost.  Everytime I do this, the new refillable tub is less expensive than the refill inserts and the small can.

My baby is almost 8 months old, and he is still drinking the Newborn formulation.  Newborn advertises that it is for babies up to 3 months old.  When he got to about that age, and I was looking to buy formula, I picked up a container of the regular Infant formulation and compared them side by side.

The reuseable tub of Newborn purports to make approximately 170 oz.  The Infant formulation of the same size and price makes about 167 oz.  That's close enough to the same to not be pursuasive one way or the other on its own.

Then I looked at the nutrition information.  The Newborn and Infant formulations offer identical amounts of calories, protein, fat and all nutrients except vitamin D.  The Newborn formula has more vitamin D than the Infant.

So, the Newborn has more vitamin D and makes 3 more ounces than the Infant formulation.

The last 2 nails in this particular coffin were finding a tearpad of coupons for the Newborn, and only the Newborn, reuseable tubs in my pediatricians office, and at my husband's insistance asking my pediatrician.  He didn't appear to have given the matter any thought, but when I told him the nutritional difference between them, and that I could get the Newborn cheaper (courtesy of the coupon) than the Infant, he gave me the go ahead to keep feeding Newborn formula.  He also mumbled something about marketing gimmics.

I found those coupons in January, and they didn't expire until June.  They still had more every time we went back in for a check up, and every time I grabbed more to keep the savings rolling on in.

On top of that, I watched the sales.  Grocery stores and supercenters, oddly, aren't usually the best places to buy formula, not if you watch the sales and not if you buy a couple weeks worth of formula at a time when it is on sale somewhere.  The drugstores, CVS, Walgreens and Rite Aid, have had some great sales on formula regularly enough that if you keep 2-3 weeks worth of formula on hand you can coast to the next good sale most of the time.

Most stores sell the refillable tub in the $25 to $28 range, as an everyday price.  At least twice a month, I've been finding it on sale for $20 to $23.  I get really excited when it goes on sale at Rite Aid or CVS.  At Rite Aid, I was working on "earning" my 1000 points so I could earn the 20% discount off the everyday price.  Courtesy of a lot of sales on baby items, I hit the Gold discount, and I get 20% off everyday.  At the most expensive Rite Aid in town, my baby's formula, after my discount, is under $22 everyday.  At CVS, my baby purchases count towards my quarterly ECB rewards.  It's not much, 2% of your spending rounded down, but 2% is better than 0%, and that's what the grocery store offers.

What about buying online?  I checked in to that.  The best prices I could find online were as high or higher than the sale prices I was paying locally, and I couldn't use my manufacturer's coupons to bring that down like I can at the store.  Some places offer free shipping, others don't.  I could not find a deal online that could beat what I was paying right down the street.  You may.