For Shopkick:
250 kicks = $1
take your total amount of kicks you're getting /divide by 250 = total $ you're getting back
For Fetch:
1,000 points = $1
For Swagbucks:
100SB = $1
Q-coupon
DQ- digital coupon
IP- internet printable
Peelie- coupon found on product
MFR- manufacturer coupon
oop- out of pocket
OOS- out of stock
NLA- no longer available
MM- money maker
Overage- when your coupons are worth more than the cost of the item and the difference is applied to the rest of your cart
ISO- in search of
BOGO- buy one get one
WYB- when you buy
WYS- when you spend
GC- gift card
WAGS- Walgreens
RR- register reward (Walgreens)
WC- Walgreens cash (Walgreens)
ECB- extra care bucks (CVS)
CRT- cash register tape (CVS)
SS- Smart Source Insert
P&G- Proctor & Gamble Insert
Dead Deal- deal is no longer available
Inserts- coupons that come in the Sunday Paper
Circular- a stores weekly advertisement
EXP- expired
Rolling/Roll- using store rewards towards purchase to lower out of pocket cost
Not at all! I actually rarely use coupons from the newspaper inserts. There are so many great deals you can do using only digital coupons (Target app, Kroger app, etc.) and rebate apps!
Ibotta is able to be cashed out to PayPal or gift cards at $20. The PayPal credit is instant, and gift cards only take a few minutes.
Fetch is able to cash out to gift cards starting at $5 and although they say it can take 72 hours to get your gift card, I usually get mine within 10 minutes.
Couponing can be very intimidating when
you first start! My suggestion is to start with 1 store and do 1 deal at a time. Also, go into the store with a plan! I ALWAYS write down what I'm getting, the retail cost, what coupons I'm going to be using, what my expected out of pocket should be and what rebates I'm submitting to. This way I won't forget anything and there won't be any "surprises" at checkout.
I first started with Target and I can tell
you my VERY first deal I did was on a pack of luvs diapers that had a coupon and an ibotta rebate haha
The hardest part is starting!
YOU GOT THIS!
Yes! So this is something that is good to know because a lot of cashiers don't understand the verbiage and will sometimes tell you something that isn't correct (whether they mean to or not).
So let's say we have a coupon that states "1 coupon per purchase" and "2 identical coupons in the same shopping trip". Another way to think of "per purchase" is "per item" and "same shopping trip" means "same transaction"
So that means for this coupon, you can use 1 manufacturer coupon *per item* and 2 identical coupons in the *same transaction* This would mean you can buy 2 of the items, and use a total of 2 of the coupons in your transaction (1 coupon for each item).
But also remember: for stores like Publix that offer store coupons, you can use 1 manufacture coupon AND 1 store coupon per item. The "1 coupon per purchase" verbiage on manufacturer coupons is specifically for manufacturer coupons.
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