Skip to Content

Frugal Foodies: How to Save on Dining Out

Enough with the home-cooked meals. It’s time to get out of the house and let someone else prepare your food for a change.

In response to tight budgets, frugal advisers have recommended for some time now that we stay at home to save money. But such deprivation grows old fast, so maybe it’s time to consider these six tips to help you spread your dining wings without crash landing your budget.

Happy family eating healthy food while saving money dining out.

1. FourSquare Deals

Members check-in to various locations on their mobile phones using this service, but did you know you can also receive offers for freebies and discounts simply by letting FourSquare know where you are?

Check out a recent segment on FOX & Friends for a “how-to” on using the app for restaurant savings.

2. Track Daily Deals

Restaurants are one of the most common frequenters of daily deal offerings, so it pays to keep an eye out for vouchers that can greatly reduce the cost of dining at a new or favored eatery.

Just make sure you read the small print and are aware of expiration dates and exclusions.

For example, most restaurant vouchers don’t include drinks.

3. Get Happy

Eating early isn’t just for our elders. Happy hour ad early bird deals have become more common as restaurants try to fill in slow traffic times.

For example, Applebee’s Neighborhood Grill offers full-size appetizers for under $5 before 6 p.m., plus $3 drink specials.

4. Split It Up

American restaurants usually overload our plates — unless they’re into Nuvo cuisine — so there’s often enough food for two in a single order.

You can cut your costs down to around $20 by simply sharing an appetizer, entree, and dessert with a friend or date.

5. Gift Yourself

We tend to think of gift cards in terms of what we can offer others, but they’re actually very useful for individual purchases.

Sites let you purchase gift cards for several restaurants at a discounted rate, yielding immediate savings of up to 50 percent.

6. MatchPin

If you live in one of nine major cities, you might download the free MatchPin app.

Membership brings you offers, rewards, contests, and announcements from a variety of local restaurants.

About Julee: Julee Morrison is an experienced author with 35 years of expertise in parenting and recipes. She is the author of four cookbooks: The Instant Pot College Cookbook, The How-To Cookbook for Teens, The Complete Cookbook for Teens, and The Complete College Cookbook. Julee is passionate about baking, crystals, reading, and family. Her writing has appeared in The LA Times (Bon Jovi Obsession Goes Global), Disney's Family Fun Magazine (August 2010, July 2009, September 2008), and My Family Gave Up Television (page 92, Disney Family Fun August 2010). Her great ideas have been featured in Disney's Family Fun (Page 80, September 2008) and the Write for Charity book From the Heart (May 2010). Julee's work has also been published in Weight Watchers Magazine, All You Magazine (Jan. 2011, February 2011, June 2013), Scholastic Parent and Child Magazine (Oct. 2011), Red River Family Magazine (Jan. 2011), BonAppetit.com, and more. Notably, her article "My Toddler Stood on Elvis' Grave and Scaled Over Boulders to Get to a Dinosaur" made AP News, and "The Sly Way I Cured My Child's Lying Habit" was featured on PopSugar. When she's not writing, Julee enjoys spending time with her family and exploring new baking recipes.
error: Content is protected !!