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Cutting Costs

Kids Eating with Dad

Look for restaurants where kids eat free!

For many, dining out is an occasional indulgence that is carefully balanced against the cost. For others, especially those who travel often, it is an essential and costly part of life. Thankfully, there are some creative ways for everyone to save money while dining out.

What follows are ten tips for dining out on the cheap. The bottom line: you don’t have to shift to cheap fast food and unhealthy menu options — we’ll show you some great alternatives to costly full-price menu items.

1. Phone in ahead of your visit to find out if there are any discounts or weekly specials.

A single phone call may alert you to the existence of “kids eat free” specials on certain nights or senior discounts.  If you arrive between 4:00-6:00 p.m., some restaurants reward you with an “early-bird discount.” Some restaurants also offer “happy hours” where certain items are reduced.

2. Use coupons designed for tourists.

Act like a tourist and stop by the welcome center or visitor’s bureau and pick up the local coupon publications. They’re often full of restaurant specials, meal coupons, buy one get one free specials, free menu items, and other savings.

3. Take advantage of printable coupons and online special alerts.

Go to the restaurant’s web site and see if they have any printable coupons. While you are there sign up for their promotional email newsletter so you will be alerted to their latest specials. Follow them on Twitter or become a Facebook fan and they may push you some other benefits as well.

4. If it’s just two of you, consider splitting a dinner and an appetizer instead of ordering separate dinners.

Many restaurants serve very large portions. To avoid waste or over-eating,  consider splitting an entree and an appetizer with your dining partner. Ask for a second plate and you’re good to go.

5. Take your leftovers home for a second meal.

Stretch that dining experience (and your meal budget) for another day by asking for a to-go box. Many enjoy reliving a version of the restaurant experience at home with the leftovers.

6. Drink water.

Water is not only a healthy option, but it is complimentary at many restaurants. Ask for water with lemon if you want to enhance the flavor — lemon effectively masks many flavor variances found within local water supplies.

7. Shake things up by visiting two or more restaurants.

For a fun twist, consider buying an appetizer, salad, or side at one restaurant, then splitting an entree at another, and finally capping things off with a dessert at a third. (Or you could buy a carton of gourmet ice cream on your way home for less than most desserts would cost you out.) By doing this you can mix and match budget options to include a premium selection with less of a hit to your pocketbook.

8. Go out for lunch instead of dinner.

Lunch items are typically much cheaper than dinner entrees.  Many restaurants also offer lunch specials and combo-meals that can save your cash.

9. Try a newly-opened restaurant.

New restaurants are out to create a good name. They often offer special discounts, treat you really well, and serve large quantities of food before they can depend on an established customer base. Take advantage of these limited-time opportunities.

10. Buy a Restaurant.com dining certificate.

More than 15,000 local restaurants participate in Restaurant.com‘s “$25 Restaurant Gift Certificates for only $10″ program. You choose the restaurant, buy your gift certificate, and print it out online (or they’ll email it to you). Be sure to follow the redemption instructions and you can save a lot of money, especially since there are often Restaurant.com coupon codes that can bring the $10 certificate cost down to just $2 or $3! Learn more ways to benefit from Restaurant.com.

Bonus: Don’t forget your server and tip well.

In all your dining out on the cheap, please don’t forget your server. Most servers depend on your tips for their livelihood. While you are enjoying that great coupon, your server’s work load didn’t change. Whether you drank water or fine wine or whether your entree was buy one get one free or full price, your server deserves a tip based on the quality of service provided and the published value of the items consumed. Servers remember their good (and not so good) patrons and tend to reward the good tippers with superior service in the future.

So there you have our 10 tips for dining out on the cheap. We know this list is not exhaustive so please share your dining on a budget tip below.

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Rent, download or buy used to save a lot.

Its back to school time and it seems like you’re blowing your entire budget on single-use books.

Fact: Students are spending up to $600 a year on books at community colleges, $900 a year at the state level, and well into the $1300 dollar range at some private schools, med school, and other upper echelon education facilities.

That’s a lot of money! Even if it is dad’s money…he would appreciate it so much if you could save him up to 60% on expensive college textbooks every single year, year after year.

The are many alternatives to standing in line at the university bookstore and racking up a huge bill for brand new textbooks. Right now we’ll show you five ways you can save big money every semester on books that you buy for school.

1. Don’t go “print,” go “printable.”

Yes, you read it right. Printable textbooks are becoming as mainstream as that dreaded math class. Imagine being able to download a textbook (the entire book) or only the portion you need, like a single chapter, and pay just for the chapter(s) you need.

Buying a single chapter or multiple chapters electronically can save you literally hundreds of dollars a year, and you’re not limited to reading it on your computer. Downloaded textbooks and chapters are printable documents that make them easy to use wherever you may be. And should you ever need to re-access the information, you have a saved, printed version. Now you won’t have to waste time on Facebook or texting friends asking to borrow their books!

[Tip: Visit CengageBrain, CourseSmart, and eBooks.com for a large selection of printable textbooks.]

2. Be a Renter, Not a Buyer.

You’ll never “own” the information in a book, so why “own” the book? Instead keep the information tucked safely away in your brain where it should be and save money on textbooks by renting books by the month, project, semester, or longer.

Similar to downloading ebooks, renting college textbooks saves you money and you get the book you need as a less expensive alternative to new textbooks.

Renting is a lot like buying used textbooks. The books arrive in good condition, are usable, have all their pages and you save money. However with renting college textbooks you’re only paying for the time you need, then you return the book.

If you decide to rent college textbooks you’ll save yourself about 70% over buying the same books in brand new condition. This means you can actually rent more books than you budgeted for such as alternative readings, unexpected lab books, etc.

The other benefit to renting is that you’re not sacrificing a tree to earn an “A” in Micro-Fungal Theory, so your personal “carbon footprint” is reduced, making for a happier planet.

[Tip: Two popular online providers of rental textbooks are Chegg and Campus Book Rentals.]

3. Buying Used – Now a Much Cheaper and Safer Option

Yes, in bygone years there were real life horror stories about buying used books, but those days are [click to continue…]

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