Small savings compound into significant amounts over time. A household saving just £200 per month extra puts away £2,400 per year — or over £12,000 in five years before interest. Here are 50 practical, UK-specific ways to cut your spending without sacrificing quality of life.
Bills and Utilities
1. Switch Energy Tariff
When your fixed deal ends, compare tariffs on comparison sites. The difference between the cheapest and most expensive tariffs can be £200–£400/year.
2. Switch Broadband
Broadband is one of the most overpaid bills. When your contract ends, call to negotiate or switch. Typical saving: £100–£200/year.
3. Negotiate Your Mobile Contract
SIM-only deals are significantly cheaper than handset contracts. A SIM-only plan costs £5–£15/month compared to £30–£60 for a contract with a phone.
4. Review Insurance Annually
Never auto-renew car insurance or home insurance. Compare and switch every year — typical saving £50–£200.
5. Cancel Unused Subscriptions
The average UK household spends £60–£100/month on subscriptions. Audit every recurring payment and cancel anything you don’t actively use.
6. Reduce Water Usage
Install a water meter if you use less than your rateable value suggests. Reduce shower time and fix dripping taps.
7. Claim Council Tax Discounts
Living alone? You get 25% off council tax. Students, carers, and people with severe mental impairment may qualify for further discounts. See our council tax guide.
Food and Groceries
8. Meal Plan Weekly
Planning meals before shopping eliminates impulse buys and reduces food waste. Average saving: £30–£60/month.
9. Shop at Budget Supermarkets
Aldi and Lidl are typically 20–30% cheaper than Tesco or Sainsbury’s for equivalent products. Switch for your main shop.
10. Use Supermarket Loyalty Apps
Tesco Clubcard prices, Nectar prices, and Lidl Plus offers give significant discounts — 10–40% off selected items.
11. Buy Own-Brand Products
Supermarket own-brands are often made by the same manufacturers as branded products at 30–50% less.
12. Batch Cook
Cook large batches and freeze portions. Saves money on ingredients and reduces the temptation to order takeaways.
13. Reduce Food Waste
UK households waste £60/month on average. Use leftovers, freeze what you won’t eat in time, and understand date labels (best before ≠ use by).
14. Use Too Good To Go
Get “magic bags” of surplus food from restaurants and supermarkets for £2–£4 (worth £10–£15+).
Transport
15. Walk or Cycle Short Journeys
Many car trips are under 2 miles. Walking saves fuel and improves health.
16. Use a Railcard
16–25 Railcard, 26–30 Railcard, Two Together Railcard, and Family Railcard all save one-third on most rail fares. Cost: £30/year.
17. Compare Fuel Prices
Use PetrolPrices or Google Maps to find the cheapest fuel nearby. Supermarket fuel stations are often cheapest.
18. Consider Car Sharing
If you commute by car, platforms like Liftshare match you with others making the same journey.
19. Drive Efficiently
Gentle acceleration, maintaining tyre pressure, and removing roof racks when not in use can improve fuel economy by 10–15%.
20. Challenge the Need for a Second Car
A second car costs £3,000–£5,000/year to run. Could public transport, cycling, or car hire cover the gap?
Shopping and Spending
21. Use Cashback Sites
TopCashback and Quidco pay you cash back on purchases from hundreds of retailers. Average UK user earns £100–£300/year.
22. Wait 48 Hours Before Big Purchases
Impulse buys account for a significant portion of overspending. Waiting separates wants from needs.
23. Buy Second-Hand
Facebook Marketplace, Vinted, and charity shops offer clothes, furniture, and electronics at a fraction of new prices.
24. Use the Library
Free books, audiobooks, magazines, and often free access to digital resources like newspapers.
25. Sell What You Don’t Use
Declutter and sell on eBay, Vinted, or Facebook Marketplace. Average household has £500–£1,000 of sellable unused items.
Housing
26. Remortgage When Your Deal Ends
Moving from your lender’s SVR to a new fixed deal can save £200–£500/month. See our remortgaging guide.
27. Consider Overpaying Your Mortgage
Even small overpayments reduce total interest significantly. See our mortgage overpayment calculator.
28. Rent Out a Spare Room
Earn up to £7,500/year tax-free under the rent-a-room scheme.
29. Improve Energy Efficiency
Draught-proofing, loft insulation, and LED bulbs reduce energy bills. Many can be done cheaply or with government grants.
30. Reduce Heating Costs
Turn your thermostat down by 1°C — saving around £80–£100/year. Use a programmable thermostat to heat only when needed.
Financial Products
31. Switch to a Reward Current Account
Some current accounts offer cashback on bills or higher interest on balances.
32. Use a Credit Card for Cashback
Cashback credit cards return 0.5–1% on spending. Pay in full monthly to avoid interest. Use our 0% credit card guide.
33. Move Savings to Better Rates
Compare savings rates and move your money. The difference between the worst and best savings accounts can be 1–2% per year.
34. Use Your ISA Allowance
ISA returns are tax-free — especially valuable for higher rate taxpayers.
35. Check Your Tax Code
An incorrect tax code means you may be overpaying tax. Check via your HMRC personal tax account.
Lifestyle
36–40: Entertainment Savings
- Free museum and gallery entry — most national museums are free
- Use student/military/NHS discounts where applicable
- Attend free local events — parks, community centres, festivals
- Share streaming subscriptions within household plans
- Use free fitness options — YouTube workouts, Couch to 5K, park runs
41–45: Family Savings
- Buy children’s clothes second-hand — they grow out of them fast
- Use tax-free childcare — 20% government top-up
- Check benefit entitlements — use an online benefits calculator
- Claim child benefit even if liable for the High Income charge — it protects NI credits
- Use Kids Eat Free offers at restaurants
46–50: Mindset Shifts
- Track every expense for one month — awareness alone changes behaviour
- Set a budget and review monthly
- Use the 50/30/20 rule as a starting framework
- Pay yourself first — save on payday before spending
- Build an emergency fund — avoiding debt for unexpected costs saves hundreds in interest