The Cairns Post

Easy ways to save in 2020

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Those trips to the coffee shop add up if you visit every day. Picture: iStock.

LEAKAGE SPENDING:

from your everyday transactio­n account.

Out of sight, out of mind. Work out what you need stashed away by the end of the year and then work backwards.

For instance, if you need $5000 saved up, with 48 weeks to go this means tucking away about $105 per week.

Leaving the money in a high-interest savings account usually works well and ideally somewhere that you cannot access it easily.

2BUY CHRISTMAS STUFF NOW

The post-Christmas sales are the ideal time to stock up on all the items that you need every festive season.

This includes wrapping paper, tags and cards.

Work out what you need and grab it before stores remove these items .

I’ve scored myself a stash of goods which had discounts of up to 75 per cent on them.

By Christmas this year noone will have any idea you purchased the stuff in January.

3CUT UNNECESSAR­Y SPENDING

If you’ve got what I call leakage spending happening from your account, it could be worth putting a stop to it now.

It could be those lunches you seem to buy multiple times a week or endless coffees that only seem a small amount when you’re shelling out $3 or $4 a pop.

A couple of years ago I decided to quit coffee for good and I’ve never looked back.

I now resort to a giant box of Twinings tea bags, which I use at work each day, saving me a packet every week.

I was probably buying four coffees a week at $3 each, so on these calculatio­ns I’ve saved $624 a year.

4PAY OFF DEBT

Regardless of whether you have good or bad debt, in most cases the ideal situation is to pay it off.

For those who have a home loan, interest rates have never been lower – many deals start with just a “2” in front.

If you can, increase your repayments so you can pay down the debt faster while rates are low.

On a $300,000 30-year loan with a rate of 3.5 per cent, if you upped the minimum repayments of $1265 by $200 per month you would save $54,000 in interest repayments and shave three years and 11 months off the loan term.

For those with credit card debt, stop using the card and consider switching the debt to a balance-transfer interestfr­ee deal.

@sophieelsw­orth

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