Following the credit card thread, I’ve learned that some people use credit card points and miles to pay for hotels, that seems pretty interesting.

Children toys being second hands comes to mind too.

What are your ideas?

  • @Hazdaz@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    411 months ago

    Any purchases more than $X should take more than Y days to actually do. And the higher the cost, the most days to think about it. Impulse buys tend to be bad financially and many of times are regretted, so if you wanted to buy a certain item on Monday, wait till Friday and see if you still really gotta have that item. If you are being honest with yourself, you’ll know of you really need that item.

    Another tip is to either buy everything in cash or everything on one credit card. Cash is obviously best since once it’s gone, it’s gone, but in today’s world cash isn’t convenient. So instead pay for everything kn your CC. Then st the end of the month, you know exact how much you spent and where it went. There’s no question at that point because one of the hardest things to do is actually track everything - sometimes you forget to write it down, sometimes you lose your list, sometimes the value is written incorrectly. Well your CC will do all the math automatically for you.

    • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      English
      2
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      I do the first and it’s great. I don’t have a fixed length of time to wait, but generally I try to wait at least a few days for anything “big.” A lot of the time, I realize I don’t want/need it, so I save that money for something better.

      For your second point, I just use an account aggregator so it’ll pull in all the transactions I made across accounts. So to know how much I spent, I don’t need to care which card I used, it’ll pull it all in.