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Wouldn’t it be nice to put aside a little more money this year? After spending a little time on this earth, you come to realize that unexpected expenses are never-ending. You thought you’d put aside X amount of dollars last year, but then you had to get new tires on your car, buy a new vacuum, face an increase in your health insurance premium, and get a dog walker because your office asked you to come in three days a week. Before you knew it, you made X amount of dollars minus $1,200. That was a bummer. Since life won’t stop throwing surprise costs your way, the best way to combat it is to cut costs. If you do it the right way, you won’t feel a decrease in quality of life. Here are easily achievable resolutions to help you save more money this year.

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Find free parking

Leave 10 minutes earlier so you can park in the residential area, three blocks away from your destination, for free, rather than at the $2 per hour meters right in front of it.

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Share a Lyft/Uber

This is another instance in which leaving earlier can save you money. If you can dedicate an extra 15 minutes or so to your commute, use the sharing feature on Lyft or Uber. You can usually shave around $5 to $7 off a 20-minute ride.

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Make time to grocery shop

You meant to cook at home last year, but you forgot about one little thing: making time to grocery shop. If you don’t have food in the fridge, you can’t very well cook. So dedicate 45 minutes a week to going to the store. Consider it a real, standing appointment—like a dentist appointment.

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Make time to cook

You also need to set aside time to cook if you’re going to save money by cooking. Pencil cooking and cleaning time into your calendar and say no to that extra task or favor at the end of the day that your friend asks you to do—that’s when you’re cooking.

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Create an entertainment checking account

Entertainment is not a necessity. It’s nice, but it’s not a necessity. So create an account from which you draw all your entertainment money. If you’re going to happy hour, a movie, a concert, or a museum, you take the money for it out of this account. When the account is empty for the month, it’s time for you to find free ways to entertain yourself.

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Wash your own car

Washing your own car is an easy way to quickly put aside an extra $40 to a $80 a month (if you wash your car twice a month—which you probably should). You can buy enough products to wash your car for an entire year for the same price of one detailed hand wash.

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Go generic

On your toilet paper, sanitary wipes, window cleaner, paper towels, hand soap, and just about anything that your pharmacy makes generic. If you look at the materials and ingredients, they are usually identical to the name brand stuff.

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Keep water bottles on hand

The amount of money wasted on finding oneself dehydrated on-the-go is a real shame. Buy water bottles in bulk at your local wholesale store like Costco or Sam’s Club and keep spare ones in your car, in each bag, in your desk, and anywhere you spend time out of your home.

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Make your own coffee

If you’re really into coffee and particularly into coffee from a fancy shop, you might be spending around $80 to $100 a month on coffee. Think about it: a regular-sized coffee at most shops runs you $2.25 to $2.75 these days. If you upgrade to a large, or some special blended thing, you’re easily looking at $4 to $5 a day on coffee. Yikes! Meanwhile, a big canister of quality coffee from a grocery store can cost you $14 and will last you over a month.