Since when did I ever claim I go to restaurants just so I can have “unlimited access to the condiment bar”? That is a straw-man.
I certainly realize it is cheaper to make home cooked meals 3 times a day, 7 days a week. But not everyone has the time to do that. I think one other poster mentioned getting hot sauce packets from Taco Bell. I doubt that person is going there every single day either.
I did not say you* did *go to restaurants so you could have unlimited access to the condiment bar. I said the owners would not care
if you did. They’d still make a profit. They would not want anyone discouraging you from their business out of a false desire to protect them from the business of customers who like to fill their packet drawers with ketchup, soy sauce and salsa.
I grew up in a family of eight and crazy busy but there were no fast food places where we lived. Even sit-down restaurants were a long ways away. The grocery story was a long ways away.
If Taco Bell was not there, you’d get by without it. If the grocery store wasn’t nearby, you’d get by without frequent trips to it. If you want to save money by never going to a restaurant, you can figure out a way to do without it.
That is not to say there is something wrong with including a fast-food restaurant in your money-and-time budget! I’m only saying that there is *no financial sense *in patronizing restaurants because of the condiment packets. You may as well help yourself while you’re there, and they do not care if you do. Great. I’m only saying it does not pencil out as a “frugality hack.” Stay home just one time when you might have gone, and you can save more than you’d save in a year of scoring two or three extra ketchup packets.
Having said that, maybe those extra condiments make it easier for you to pack a lunch. Maybe that helps you with a habit that saves you time and money! Then you’re talking savings. I know someone who saves those things because they save money by making their own freeze-dried backpacking meals, and the results can be greatly enhanced by using recipes that call for condiment packets from restaurants.
Again: the restaurants simply do not care, not if you’re not throwing a fist in and emptying scooping the contents of the ketchup box into your coat pocket. It is OK.
I agree with all of this, but I meant for this topic to be about “hacks”, easy tips most people could implement that could save them a few pennies a day, that could add up with time. Since I’ve noticed that many common “frugality hacks” often mentioned such as making your own laundry detergent, beauty supplies, etc. may save money, but hardly save time.
Again, if people think getting ketchup from restaurants is too “cheap” or “penny wise pound foolish” or whatever, then I have no issue with them deciding not to do it.
What I don’t appreciate is the judgmental “oh you are a thief, taking things that you didn’t pay for” or “you are being too cheap, that’s pathetic” attitude.
ETA: But just to make it absolutely clear, this is a disclaimer: I am NOT advising that anyone spend money going to fast food shops or restaurants merely to score free sauce packets. I am NOT advising taking 20-30 packets a time. I am certainly NOT advising taking packets without paying for any food or drink items at all.
Here is the thing: pennies add up on when you’re buying in volume. If you save ten cents a can on something that costs 50 cents a can and that you use that item by the case, you’re talking about saving 20% on a major food item.
If you really want to save money, though, the best way is to a) look for things you can just do without (up to 100% savings!) and b) look for things that save you from other purchases (like investing in good-quality clothing and taking good care of it) and c) look for low-cost substitutes. ALWAYS look for what percentage or what absolute amount you are saving compared to the effort involved.
For instance, maintaining your car makes it last longer. Putting off having to purchase a different car or having to do major repairs saves a lot of money. Being able to do routine maintenance yourself saves a lot of money. We’re not talking pennies. We’re talking dollars in the two or three or even four or more digits.
Sometimes, though, pennies add up to…pennies. Worth bending over to pick up, but not something that will change your financial picture when you retire or your ability to come up with the money for piano lessons right now.