Having trouble putting money aside? At ESSERLAW LLC, our goal is to help you live a debt free lifestyle. Recently, we found a great article on www.moneytalksnews.com titled: “7 Ways to Make Your Savings Grow Faster Automatically.

Here are some systems to put in place so you can amass cash without thinking too much.

1. Pay yourself first

Payroll deduction is among the best fixes for struggling savers. With this approach, you have money automatically taken from your paycheck and transferred to a savings or retirement account. Your employer may even allow you to directly deposit paychecks into multiple accounts.

Send any additional income from raises, bonuses, cash awards or other windfalls straight to savings. If your air conditioner breaks down or it’s time to take that cruise, you’ll have a nice sum of money waiting for you in the bank.

2. Round up your savings

Some banks, including Bank of America, have programs that automatically round up debit-card purchases, and then transfer the extra amount into your savings account.

For example, say your tall vanilla latte costs $3.50. Under this system, your bill would be rounded up to $4, with the extra 50 cents deposited into your savings account.

You get a treat now and “keep the change” to save toward another treat later. That act alone daily would build the extra 50 cents to a painless $182.50 over the course of one year.

3. Save your change

The low-tech version of the round-up program is stashing away spare change at the end of each day. Keep it in a jar, mug, glass or piggy bank. When the container is full, turn that change into a bank deposit. Stacy says he turbo-charges this plan by stashing singles as well as coins.

Coinstar will exchange your coins for an eGift card from sponsoring partners such as AMC Theaters, The Gap, Sephora or Toys R Us. That won’t raise your savings account balance, but it will give you the opportunity to save your spare change for a special item.

4. Pay with cash

Using cash automatically makes you spend less compared to plastic. An oft-quoted Dunn & Bradstreet study says people spend 12 to 18 percent more when using credit cards instead of cash. McDonald’s says a credit card user’s average ticket is $7, but cash customers usually spend only $4.50.

Why? If you’re worried about schlepping back to the ATM to reload your wallet, you will be less tempted to spend more cash than you planned. You’ll be more inclined to pass on a higher-end model of a product. Also, you’ll stick to your shopping list and resist in-store temptations to buy more items than you intended.

5. Use rewards credit cards

If you must use a credit card, use one that offers cash back or rewards. Then, you’re earning cash or equivalents without effort.

You can check out who’s got the right card for you in the Money Talks Solutions Center.

6. Bank your discounts

What do you do with all the money you save buying bargains? Check your receipts. Most now conveniently tell you how much you saved on a sale item compared with its regular price, or how much you saved by redeeming coupons.

Add them up. Did you buy a cheaper generic and save a bundle over a name brand? Track the difference.

Make it a habit to reward yourself by placing all the money saved from those bargains into your savings account.

7. Automate your transfers

Check with your bank or credit union about how to set up automatic transfers from your checking account to your savings account. This is another way of making sure you pay yourself first. You can even set up sub-accounts and label them for special goals, such as “college fund” or “new car fund.”

Now that your savings are on automatic, relax and watch your balance grow.

 

 

 

Source: http://www.moneytalksnews.com/7-ways-make-your-savings-grow-faster-automatically/