Money Matters
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Bj's/costco/sam's v Grocery Stores
my father got us a BJ's membership for christmas. I've never really shopped there before. For those of you that shop at a place like that, are the prices really a lot cheaper? we want to cut our grocery/household supply budget and I am wondering if it is worth doing some of the shopping there. We have a chest freezer for frozen foods and a garage for large things of TP or papertowels and stuff.
Although we do want to cut our budget, we do not have time for major coupon cutting and running around to a million stores for deals. the idea would be to go to BJ's for the big stuff and then one other grocery store for the other stuff. We use coupons but I'm not extreme or even consistent with them although I'm working on it.
Oh and what do you find to be the best deals there??
Our little hippo was as impatient as mom!
Hoping for a full 40 weeks!!
Re: Bj's/costco/sam's v Grocery Stores
Our membership isn't to BJ's, but to Sams. So I'll say what we've found.
1. Their gas is cheaper if you use your savers card. H works near Sams, and will fill up his car using our membership card. He spends about $350+ per month in gas, so this makes a big difference.
2. Plan your grocery list before you go. Some things are cheaper, and some things are not.
3. This is the bulk of what I buy there: Frozen veggies/snacks, individual chips for lunches, lunch meat (buy multiple packages and freeze), yogurt, cleaning products, toiletries, dog/cat food and litter, some fresh meat.
4. Things I find aren't cheaper: Dry goods, produce, non-food items such as clothing, electronics, etc.
Definitely do a bit of price matching when you go. Make a list of usual items you purchase on a regular basis, and look at your past receipts from where you normally shop. Write down the prices for the items from there, then calculate the price at BJ's (per unit price). That's the best way to find out what you will save money on, and what you won't save money on.
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One perk of your membership that not everybody realizes is access to great travel deals. We had to rent a car over Thanksgiving weekend (yuck!) and booking through BJs was over $100 cheaper than the next best option, AAA. They have fantastic deals on trip packages too, though I haven't booked one yet.
For gas, it is the second cheapest in our area. The cheapest is a regional brand called Cumberland Farms, once you join their rewards program.
ETA-I don't eat meat, but echo Jessica that I've heard good things.
Paper products
Bottled water
Milk
Cereal
Sauces
As OP have said, compare prices. Many things I find to be cheaper, but not all.
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