Saving 101 Sweat the Big Stuff and Save $26,000 Read the Article Open Share Drawer Share this:Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) Written by Mint.com Published Apr 22, 2008 4 min read Advertising Disclosure The views expressed on this blog are those of the bloggers, and not necessarily those of Intuit. Third-party blogger may have received compensation for their time and services. Click here to read full disclosure on third-party bloggers. This blog does not provide legal, financial, accounting or tax advice. The content on this blog is "as is" and carries no warranties. Intuit does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, and completeness of the content on this blog. After 20 days, comments are closed on posts. Intuit may, but has no obligation to, monitor comments. Comments that include profanity or abusive language will not be posted. Click here to read full Terms of Service. Life is precious — and it’s way too short to spend searching for that Val-Pak coupon for 20% off a $2.95 burger. (That’s a whopping $0.60 savings, by the way.) If you want to bank some serious coin, one simple axiom will serve you better than thousands of Sunday-paper advertising circulars: Sweat the big stuff. Think about it: Which would you rather pocket, 20% off a $50 purchase or 20% off a $500 one? Exactly. Yet too many people wear themselves out chasing down pocket change and let the big-ticket stuff slide. We suggest that you start with the big stuff and work your way down your spending list as time and energy allow. That’s right: Enjoy your morning latte. Go ahead and order dessert. It’s time to bring sanity to the pursuit of savings. Save with more precision While every dollar is an investment, not every investment has equal potential. Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto knew this, and his 80/20 Pareto Principle suggests that 80% of life’s effects come from 20% of its causes. So 20% of your computer’s programs consume 80% of its memory; 20% of salespeople generate 80% of sales; 20% of citizens earn 80% of the country’s income. The Motley Fool spin on the 80/20 principle is this: 80% of money-saving results can be achieved by tackling just 20% of your expenditures. That’s good news for those who don’t relish managing their money 24-7. It means concentrating your money-saving efforts on the uber-budget categories — your mortgage, insurance, travel, holiday spending, investments, and, of course, anything with a three- or four-digit price tag — and making sure your biggest assets are working as hard as they can for you. Here’s how to be an efficient tightwad (and we mean that in the best possible way): Slash your car insurance costs by 15% or more simply by raising your deductible from $500 to $1,000. (That’s $100 savings on your premium if you pay $700 annually to cover your wheels.) Stop settling for anemic checking-account interest rates by moving your money to a high-yield savings account. Instead of earning $15 a year on $5,000 sitting in your checking account earning 0.26% APY, pocket $150 annually at a high-yield rate. Free up $200 extra each month to invest (or pay off your debt) by adjusting your withholding now instead of getting a $2,500 tax refund (last year’s average) from the IRS. Stop paying three times what you should on mutual fund management fees (e.g. 0.5% on your S&P 500 tracker instead of 0.18%) by taking the time to compare your investments with like ones at a low-cost fund provider. Spending your lunch hour doing the research is worth it: A $10,000 investment (earning 8% annualized returns) earns about $622 more in the low-cost fund after 10 years — $8,165 more after 30 years. That’s thousands of dollars in savings from four targeted money moves, which leaves plenty more time to tackle some other expenditures hiding out in your budget. Target the small stuff that’s actually big stuff Things like cable TV, brokerage account fees, and even those daily lattes can easily turn into “big stuff” when you’re not looking. Let’s light up our spending scoreboard and take a look: “Big Stuff” in Disguise Cost Per Month Cost Per Year Cost Over 5 Years Cable TV $150 for premium service $1,800 $9,000 Online “bargain” shopping $250 $3,000 $15,000 Frequent stock trading $105 (15 trades a month at $6.99 each) $1,260 $6,300 Two Starbucks visits a day $80 $960 $4,800 Totals $585 $6,180 $35,100 Let’s say you find cheap alternatives to these regular monthly expenditures (we’re not asking you to give up those lattes for good!) and then, like a good Fool, sock away the savings. In our example, we’ll say the money is earning a tidy 6% average annualized return. What happens then? Since we already gave away the $26,000 punch line in the headline, I’ll skip the fanfare and cut right to “Tah-dah!” “Big stuff” in Disguise Lower-Cost Substitute Savings Per Month Savings Per Year Savings Invested Over 5 years Earning 6% Cable TV Cancel premium service (watch on the Net or use Netflix instead) $50 $600 $3,489 Online “bargain” shopping Limit purchases to $20 a week $170 $2,040 $11,861 Frequent stock trading Trade three times a month $84 $1,008 $5,861 Two Starbucks visits a day Three Starbucks visits a week $74 $888 $5,163 Totals $378 $4,536 $26,374 A few tweaks to routine spending can mean the difference, over five years, between shelling out $35,000 versus amassing more than $26,000. Sweating the big stuff — the right stuff — simply means finding ways to whittle down the high-dollar categories gnawing away at your long-term wealth. See what a difference this targeted and sane approach could make in your cash flow with the financial calculator Previous Post Doing Online Financial Planning? Watch Out For Tax Scams! Next Post Getting Away without Getting Soaked: Part I of III on… Written by Mint.com More from Mint.com Browse Related Articles Mint App News Intuit Credit Karma welcomes all Minters! Retirement 101 5 Things the SECURE 2.0 Act changes about retirement Home Buying 101 What Are Homeowners Association (HOA) Fees and What Do … Financial Planning What Are Tax Deductions and Credits? 20 Ways To Save on… Financial Planning What Is Income Tax and How Is It Calculated? Investing 101 The 15 Best Investments for 2023 Investing 101 How To Buy Stocks: A Beginner’s Guide Investing 101 What Is Real Estate Wholesaling? Life What Is A Brushing Scam? Financial Planning WTFinance: Annuities vs Life Insurance