Here's another example of what I consider thriftiness, not cheapness.
My credit union branch doesn't have a coin-counting machine. I think maybe the main branch does, but I rarely have any reason to go there. Neither have I the patience, however, to sit around counting and rolling coins. But that's what I did for a long time because I certainly was not going to pay the fees that the Coinstar machine at Price Chopper charges to count coins (11 percent or thereabouts).
But my daughter (who, ironically, is always telling me how cheap I am) mentioned that Coinstar doesn't charge any fees at all if you take payment in the form of an Amazon (or other) gift card. I checked it out, and sure enough, the lass was right!
So now every coin in my pocket goes into a coffee-creamer can and eventually winds up in my Amazon account via Coinstar. Of course, that means losing the 5 percent I would have gotten back had I used their plastic, but it's still better than paying Coinstar 11 percent to count the coins.
I just turned in some coins a couple of weeks ago, but they add up pretty quickly.
Another source of endless amusement for my family and friends is the way I buy tires. I have a CarCare1 card from Synchrony Bank. The interest rate is exorbitant, but I don't give a rat's because I don't pay interest, anyway. The reason I keep the card is because Discount Tire Direct often has specials during which they, the tire manufacturer (General in my case because I like General tires), and Synchrony all offer rebates at the same time. By timing my purchases to coincide with those happy alignments, I've saved roughly half the cost on many tire purchases. I also managed to do the same with a set of very nice alloy wheels that wound up costing me about $50.00 each by the time all the rebates were considered.
I figure that it's
cost Synchrony about $400.00 in rebates alone to have me as their customer, which really does give me the giggles every time I think about it. They've raised my credit limit so high trying to get me to actually finance something that I could probably build a car from parts purchased entirely on my CarCare1 card.
Rich