1. Re-use, Repair
This wasn’t just a saying—it was a mindset. People back then repaired clothes, reused containers, and stretched everything as far as possible. With the arrival of YouTube, you can take a look at repair tutorials before replacing something. A $20 fix often beats a $300 upgrade.
2. Cook at home (almost always)
Eating out was rare in those days. Meals were simple, filling, and made from basic ingredients like beans, potatoes, bread, and seasonal veg.
Now-a-days, everyone’s batch cooking, freeze portions, and keeping 2–3 ultra-cheap “lazy meals” on standby to not fall into takeaway traps.
Plan one week at a time around sales, staples, and proteins you already have. Start by listing breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and two snacks for each day. Use a template or a simple table on your phone to avoid impulse buys at the store.
3. Grow your own food
Even small gardens helps to grow herbs, tomatoes, and greens to cut grocery costs. Even if you live in a flat, you can grow herbs on a windowsill, salad greens in containers. Small wins still cut costs and waste.
4. Grocery List by Category
Set a shopping list by category: produce, proteins, dairy, pantry, frozen. Stick to the list and shop the perimeters last to avoid nonessentials. Allocate one shopping trip for bulk staples and a small midweek trip for fresh items if needed.
4. Preserve and store food
Canning, pickling, and drying kept food from going to waste and made it last through leaner times.
Buy nonperishables and high-use items in bulk to cut unit costs; examples include toilet paper, rice, laundry detergent, and canned goods. Compare price per unit, not just the package price, to confirm real savings.
Avoid bulk purchases of perishables unless you can freeze, preserve, or consume them before spoilage. Split bulk buys with friends or family for items you won’t use quickly to get the lower unit price without waste.
5. Freeze the excess
Freezing is your best friend. Also vacuum sealers or just labeling leftovers properly so food actually gets eaten.
5. No cash – don’t buy
Credit wasn’t trusted in those days and if you didn’t have the cash, you usually didn’t buy it.
So avoid high-interest stuff like credit card balances. Treat “buy now, pay later” as a red flag, not a perk.
6. Buy secondhand and repurpose
Clothes, furniture, tools—people swapped, and reused instead of buying new. Check online second hand stores before buying retail—especially for furniture, tools, and clothes.
Make a short list of items you’ll always buy secondhand (e.g., books, decor, baby gear) and which you’ll prefer new (e.g., mattress, underwear). That clarity speeds decisions and prevents impulse purchases.
7. Waste nothing
Leftovers were reinvented into new meals. Scraps were used for broth, animal feed, or compost. Instead of random scraps, cook with “next meal” in mind. For example: if you have rotiserrie chicken, you can turn left overs into chicken tacos, pasta or soups.
8. Make things yourself
Don’t DIY everything—time matters too. Focus on high-impact stuff: basic repairs, simple cooking, cutting your own hair if you’re brave.
9. Barter and trade
If money was tight, people exchanged goods and services (called Barter) —haircuts for food, repairs for supplies.
With the arise of the digital era, you can swap via local groups or apps—help someone move and get help fixing your bike. Community still saves money.
10. Stick to a strict budget
Track every cent, by using budget tracking app, but don’t go so strict you burn out. Build in a small buffer so you actually stick to it.
11. Use less energy and utilities
Lights off, minimal heating, line-drying clothes—small habits added up.
Audit subscriptions every couple months. Streaming, apps, memberships—they quietly drain more than electricity ever did.
12. Value community
Neighbors shared tools, food, and support during the Great Depression. Frugality works better together than alone.
Borrow tools, use libraries, split subscriptions (where allowed). You don’t need to own everything you use.
13. Keep a “rainy day” mindset
Even in better times, people saved because they knew hard times could return. Aim for at least 1–3 months of expenses saved. Start small, automate it, don’t overthink it.
