Photo Credit: aoneko
There are many ways to begin tackling the grocery budget and one of the most popular ways is the art of stockpiling items when doing your grocery trips. This method, also known as the “pantry principle” by loyal Tightwad Gazette readers, is a method of shopping that is meant to give you the best bang for your buck.
Let’s begin by discussing the methods that are commonly used when people are trying to save money on their grocery shopping and the advantages and disadvantages of each.
The Planner- I feel that this is the first place to start when you begin learning how to save money on your groceries. This is for shoppers who are going from shopping whenever and for whatever they want, to accomplishing a more disciplined form of shopping for only what you need and shopping with a plan. This shopper sits down and menu plans for the amount of meals that they will need and makes a list of the ingredients needed to accomplish their task. The amount of meals planned depends on the amount of times they shop per month and they buy only what they need to accomplish their menu plan goals for the week. This is an excellent place to start and a great way to learn how to buy only what you need and to avoid impulse shopping. Being a planner myself, this method fit our lifestyle for a long time and served its purpose in helping our family save money. Unfortunately, planners focus more on the plan than the sale so this can sometimes be the most expensive option next to shopping without a plan at all. While this shopper has great meal ideas, they buy the ingredients possibly at premium prices and pay more to accomplish their plans then other types of shoppers.
The Flier Shopper- This method of shopping is the next step up and is another great way to save money. This shopper is excited when their weekly fliers and coupons arrive because this determines exactly what they will be eating for the week. Let’s say that chicken is at a bargain-basement price of $1.19 per pound. This shopper will plan a meal around everything they can make with that chicken and out of other ingredients that are featured in the flier. Their meals will consist of items made mostly from sale ingredients and they keep their grocery budget low by planning meals that fit with the sales advertisements and the items that they can get with their coupons. This shopper is still a planner, but their menu plans are created solely around sale ingredients.
The Stockpile Shopper- This way of shopping requires less initial planning and more planning after your food has already been bought. This shopper focuses on stockpiling their pantry with food purchased at the lowest possible price. Grocery shopping then becomes all about keeping your pantry stocked and not about a menu plan really at all. Let’s say that diced tomatoes are marked down to $.29 a can. This shopper would run out and buy twenty cans of diced tomatoes because they know that this is the lowest possible price based on their price book. This shopper has carefully tracked prices and they know that this deal only comes around every three months so they stock up until the next sale, calculated to happen three months later. This shopper looks at all the items that they have bought and figures that they can have a delicious spaghetti sauce, a pizza with a homemade red sauce, and the family’s favorite casserole…that all just happen to use diced tomatoes in their recipe.
Do you want to be a stockpile shopper? Here are some steps for beginning this process:
1. Sit down and make a list of the foods that you eat regularly. If you were formerly a planner, you should have some menu plans that you can take a look at. Write down these ingredients into a notebook and the prices that you normally pay for these items.
2. Cut coupons to go along with your items to gain even more savings to your stockpile. Utilize a free service like CouponMom.com to learn when to use your coupons and to help you find the best deals to apply your coupons towards.
3. Next, begin tracking the ingredients in your sales fliers and begin stockpiling the items when they go on sale. Continue writing and tracking the prices as you go along and when you see a large dip in the pricing, stock up, and up, and up. Stockpile only as much as you can afford in the grocery budget to spend and what you really can eat. The first few weeks will be difficult and you may need to allocate some money to set aside for beginning your stockpile. Understand though that each week will get easier and allow for more breathing room in the budget. As the weeks progress, you will have built up the beginnings of a pantry and will need less and less ingredients, allowing for more room in the budget to stock up on future good deals.
4. Only stockpile what you truly can eat. Even if tuna is marked to a quarter a can, if you spend ten dollars on tuna and no one really likes tuna, you are wasting money and you are wasting space in your pantry. If you find you overbought on items, consider donating them to a food pantry or a shelter so the food is not wasted.
5. If you end up miscalculating how much of an ingredient you will need, you will have to plan your dinner around that missing ingredient. A Stockpile Shopper will refuse to buy spaghetti sauce, for example, unless their store runs that item on a buy-one-get-one free sale. If the shopper runs out of that ingredient, her family won’t eat spaghetti until the next sale or they will find a way to make sauce from other ingredients that have been stockpiled.
6. Some items just can’t be stockpiled like fresh fruits and vegetables. This is where I rely on my Flier Shopper instinct. If bananas are $.19 a pound, I would scoop up ten pounds for my family. I would eat them fresh until they got ripe and then mash the ripe ones for banana breads and muffins. Applying my good shopping instinct, I would pick the sale items and also pick fruits and vegetables that offer longevity over produce that only lasts a few days or could not be used past their duration (like in the bananas example). This is why I tend to gravitate towards carrots, celery, potatoes, bananas, and apples to fill the majority of our fresh fruit and vegetable quota. Once these run out, I would rely on my stockpile of dried fruits, canned fruits, and frozen vegetables to make up the difference until my next trip.
As you can see, stockpiling can really extend your grocery dollars and can be a fun way to approach grocery shopping.
Next week we will be discussing creative ways to store your stockpile! Many of us live in smaller spaces so we have to be more creative with storage.
Which type of shopper do you identify with? Do you stockpile?







I've been all 3 of those shoppers at some point in my life. Now I'd have to say that I do a variation of all 3. Is that possible? I plan, I utilize the sale fliers and I stockpile when I see a good deal.
Enjoy the holiday weekend!
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I just started stockpiling! I've been putting it off because I thought I was saving the most money by planning, but lately I see that it's not the case. Right now, I am adding $5 to my $50/week budget to stock up on a few things. Is this wise? I tried doing bi-weekly shopping ($100), but it was just so hard to store everything. I'm not sure which method I should use. I know I'd save more if I shopped less (buy foods in bulk, etc).
My other issue is that we try to eat mostly fresh fruits and veggies and it's hard to save money that way.
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I am definitely a stockpiler. but I have learned you need to be careful about being that way – you need space to put all that food! Check out my post on how I tackled the pantry organization.
http://www.thespottosave.com/2009/06/tackle-it-tuesday-organize-pantry.html
LOVE your blog – such an inspiration….
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From Kristina (imported from FB)
"I've been all types of shoppers, but mostly, I'm a shop-when-I-need-it shopper and a flier shopper. I used to be really coupon-flier-meal planning savvy but then I had my second child a little more than a year ago and feel like it's been chaos ever since. Thanks for the inspiration and the great tips to save money shopping."
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From Danielle (imported from FB)…
"I've started doing this and think it's a great way to save money. I especially love when Meijer's organic cheese is on sale…it's normally expensive and they mark it down $1 or more, plus it lasts quite awhile in the fridge so I buy lots! Esp cheddar for shredding for various dishes. I wish I had a pantry like the one in the picture though!"
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Seriously wish I had a bigger pantry. We put a shelving unit in the garage to put extra canned goods, pasta, and soaps. I always buy stuff like body wash, dish & laundry detergent at Costco when it's on coupon for addition $3-4 off.
It definitely helps to have things on hand for last minute dinner plans or times when I run out of something and don't realize it.
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Like Nancy I do a variation of all 3-I check fliers each week online for the major stores in my area, purchase almost exclusively sale items and stockpile those items that I know my family uses a lot of, and plan menu ideas around what I get.
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I have just started stockpiling in the last 6 months and I can't believe the great deals I'm getting.
~Liz
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I am definately a stockpiler. I buy only when sale and use coupons. I also plan around what's on sale. Great article.
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Rachel- I think a budgeted amount to add to your stockpile is a great idea! I love it!
I personally go through spurts with stockpiling. In the summer months, I rarely stockpile anything because I just don't have a desire to spend time planning & shopping when the weather is nice. I do my best stockpiling in the winter months and that is what helps us to keep our grocery budget lower in the summer.
I wish I had a big pantry too! It is much harder with smaller spaces to carve a space out for stockpiling, but I am always amazed at the creativity people have when creating a space for these items.
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I tend to go back and forth between some of these. I just recently learned the art of and began stockpililng but since I have a small storage space I can't just keep doing it because I obviously run out of room. So, I have to stop until I need more or have more room.
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I've been all 3, too, and I'm best at planning. My stockpiling efforts are hit or miss – I live in a small town with limited grocery store options. If I want to shop at Kroger, I have to drive an hour away. So, I just do the best I can with the offered sales and coupons. The biggest plus to our situation is that we have a large garden every year, and I freeze & can quite a bit of food for the fall/winter months. Also, we eat fresh foods right out of the garden [whatever is ready to harvest] all spring and summer, which reduces the amount I spend for food during those months. Since my husband & I are empty nesters now, it's easier to plan – we aren't picky eaters
!!
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