

I’m a mother of four kids aged 16, 14, 13 and 11.
No, there's no typo. Yes, it was planned.
My current parenting phase involves being an Uber driver on demand and a personal chef. Although I may have planned to have four kids, I didn’t plan for the quantity of food a family of endlessly hungry, growing teens would consume or the cost of groceries each week.
In my quest to save money at the shops, I have tried many, many times to meal plan, write lists and buy on special. The trouble is that these 'tried and tested' methods rarely stick for long and before I know it, I’ve blown the grocery budget yet again.
Instead, I rely on these four hacks to save money on groceries.
1. Leave the kids at home.
Seriously. If you take anything from this article, let it be this: do the weekly shop solo to save money on groceries. Shop while the kids are at school, go at 10pm when they’re in bed or send them to the park with your partner or parents. Whatever you do, don’t take them grocery shopping.
Kids are bowerbirds drawn to bright, shiny objects.
In a supermarket, these are the fun, flavourful and pricey cereals, snacks and treats that are difficult to justify in a weekly shop. Sure, you should teach them about budgeting and making the right choices and yes, as a parent, you can (and should) say no.
With four kids, I like to pick my battles.
The supermarket is not my battleground of choice.
When I forget my golden rule and take them shopping, I find myself saying yes to muesli bars, chips and ice creams, and whilst it might make me 'the best mum ever' (in that moment anyway), it all adds up to a hefty grocery bill.