Do you still clip coupons? Do you ever get any of them online?

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I grew up clipping every single food coupon from every single paper we could find. We’d ping our neighbors and relatives if we saw something worth clipping that didn’t have a limit on the number of coupons. We often times walk into the grocery store with a coupon for every item. My mom was very good at frugal shopping. I actually remember, back on my first job as a paperboy, my mother even proposed I put a note in all the newspapers if there were good deals to call me back; I had to draw the line somewhere though, cause Mom would be all for it, to my embarrassment! :)

So it has been pretty engraved in the minds of folks for years, and seemed to have fallen off in the 90’s but rumor has it coupons are making a comeback. A recent study by comScore, an Internet information provider that tracks consumer behavior, found that 53% of consumers say they regularly visit brand Web sites to find promotions. I admit, I still have a tendency to look for the food deals when I see them - Where have I looked?

Coupons.com is the big dog I see the most ads about - I think it has the best advertising and I’m sure the domain name doesn’t hurt. It has a ton of grocery printable coupons for major household brands such as Johnson & Johnson, Unilever, Pepsi, General Mills, and Kraft. You can view available savings by category or by brand, print area-specific coupons by entering your zip code, and get an estimate of how much money they will save you.

I’ve stopped at CouponMountain.com a time or 2 specifically because they don’t require registration or a lengthy sign-up process in order to access coupons. They have coupons for all the big stores (Walmart, Toys R US, Home Depot). They also have discount codes for airfares, hotel reservations, car rentals, and online dating. And if you’re a fan of a specific store, you can subscribe for email notifications whenever special offers from that store are available.

CurrentCodes.com has a lot of well-known online stores like Barnes and Noble, Staples, and Amazon.com have a place within their shopping cart for a “coupon code” that gives a percent or dollar amount off your purchase. If you don’t know the code, you don’t get the discount, so find a coupon. A lot of times you can find these secret discount codes and coupon codes listed on in a google search, but the problem with these sites is that they’re usually personal homepages and they don’t keep the lists up to date very often.

Dealcatcher.com has a feature called SundaySaver that compiles the weekly sales circulars and Sunday ads into a similar webpage. Just enter your state to see all of the stores that had ads that week—click on a store to see the deal. You won’t find quite as many categories of coupons on Dealcatcher as on Coupons.com. Nonetheless, it has been known to cross my screen a time or two.

FatWallet.com is a big one, but it has a lot of ads, and is difficult for me to navigate. I don’t dig on it very much because of that. I like a site that has everything I want right out in the open. Check it out, but don’t spend too much time figuring it out.

All in all, I’ve got to admit, I visit them less the more my salary goes up, and time goes down; but they are very good places to find deals to live the frugal way if you’ve got the time!

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10 Comments

  • User Gravatar no imageFree From Broke (Who am I?)
    January 22nd, 2008 at 4:54 am

    Nice resource list. I don’t really get many coupons online except for the occasional BJ’s coupon. I’ll have to check a few of these sites out!

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  • User Gravatar no imageDylan (Who am I?)
    January 22nd, 2008 at 10:42 am

    You might also try DealTaker.com. They’ve got a ton of coupons, mostly for online retail stores.

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  • User Gravatar no imagehank (Who am I?)
    January 22nd, 2008 at 10:49 am

    @FFB - Yea, absolutely check them out if you’re into coupons. :)

    @Dylan - I haven’t heard of that one before, thanks for the heads up! Thanks for stopping by and welcome!

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  • User Gravatar no imageFrank (Who am I?)
    January 22nd, 2008 at 2:52 pm

    I think you should check out http://www.retailmenot.com - you will never need another coupon site - over 20000 codes for 5000 different stores apparently

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  • User Gravatar no imageFrank (Who am I?)
    January 22nd, 2008 at 2:53 pm

    oh, sorry - 50,000 discounts for sharing at over 10,000 online stores. (from their site)

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  • User Gravatar no imagehank (Who am I?)
    January 23rd, 2008 at 6:28 am

    Thanks Frank - I’ll check that one out too! Can’t ever get enough of good deals!

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  • User Gravatar no imageLekhni (Who am I?)
    January 23rd, 2008 at 8:09 am

    Well, Fatwallet and others specialize in deals on a variety of items not just food. Clipping coupons/finding deals may not save you much money on grocery, but certainly comes in handy if you are going to buy, say, a plasma TV.

    Which reminds me, I had a funny take on clipping coupons in my blog sometime back:
    http://lekhni.wordpress.com/2007/12/13/the-coupon-collector/

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  • User Gravatar no imageJeff (Who am I?)
    January 23rd, 2008 at 8:45 am

    Also go to http://coupons.smartsource.com
    for another, compeltely different batch of grocery coupons.

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Trackbacks and Pingbacks

  1. 6 scenarios where being frugal simply costs more | On Financial Success
  2. Festival of Frugality #110 — Simple Categories Edition | Mrs. Micah: Finance for a Freelance Life

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