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Shopping At Aldi
by Tawra Kellam
I spend $250-$300 a month on groceries for my family of five. One of the best things I do to keep my budget is to do most of my food shopping at Aldi. You can get a good price, get in and get out fast and you don't have to mess with using coupons.
Aldi is a small discount warehouse store. It is not an outlet store and does not sell outdated or rejected products. They offer a double your money back guarantee for all of their products. If you don't like it, they will give you your money back plus a new item. The foods are mostly Aldi brand foods. The Aldi brand is usually very good quality. I have only had one or two items where my family preferred the name brand over the Aldi brand.
The savings are significant. On a lot of items, I can save $1 or more over the price at a regular grocery store. Here's an example: Chocolate chips at the local supermarket cost $1.99. Aldi's regular price is .99. White bread in the supermarket costs $1. Aldi's bread costs .59. Whole grain bread costs $2.59 in regular grocery store, but Aldi's regular price is $1.29.
Aldi stores are all over the world. You can visit their website to see if one is near you.
There are a few rules to follow that keep their prices low:
- They accept only cash, debit or food stamps.
- They don't accept coupons.
- You have to pay a .25 deposit to get a shopping basket. There is a little quarter machine on the basket. When you return your basket, it gives you the quarter back. This keeps prices down because they don't have to pay someone to get baskets.
- You bag your own groceries. Bring your own bags. Put all your extra plastic sacks in an empty tissue box and bring it with you. You can also use the boxes they have there for free. If they don't have any boxes available and you forget your bags, they charge $.10 per bag for you to buy them.
- To get the freshest produce, ask when their truck comes and go shopping the next morning.
- Be prepared. The checkers check you out very fast. I have timed it and on average its 2-3 minutes check out time with a full basket of groceries. It may be a little awkward the first time getting used to a different way of shopping, but once you do it once or twice, the savings are addicting!
By shopping at Aldi, I get two weeks worth of groceries for $100.00 (excluding meat -- I buy it as a loss leader from other stores when it's $2 or less a pound.). I am in and out of the store in 30 minutes including bagging my groceries. Plan a little longer the first time or two as you learn your way around the store. Try it a couple of times and see if you grocery bill doesn't go down!
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The Fine Art of Grocery Shopping
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Grocery Budgets
I'm Out of Money
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About the Author
Jill Cooper and Tawra Kellam are frugal living experts and the editors of Living on a Dime. As a single mother of two, Jill Cooper started her own business without any capital and paid off $35,000 debt in 5 years on $1,000 a month income. Tawra and her husband paid off $20,000 debt in 5 years on $22,000 a year income.
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