We are the family sitting in the bleachers at a Thursday night volleyball game, eating soup out of thermoses instead of buying from the concession stand. We’re totally okay with a hearty chili, soup, or spaghetti for dinner on the go. Honestly, we’re usually just thinking about how nice it is not to be eating a soggy concession-stand hot dog.
I used to think frugal living meant saying “no” to everything. Skipping every activity, every treat, every fun thing. It doesn’t. It just means getting a little more intentional about the stuff that quietly adds up without you noticing.
Frugal living tips that actually work for busy moms are small and doable, not restrictive. A few simple swaps, like packing food instead of buying it or letting your kids spend their own money on treats, save real money without adding another complicated system to your day.

Cut Food Costs Without Living in the Kitchen
Meal planning advice always assumes you have a calm, predictable week. You don’t. Neither do I.
So instead of planning meals around a recipe, I plan around our actual schedule. I look at what we’re doing each day and ask myself honestly, is this a cook night or a cheat night? Some days it’s realistic to make a real dinner. Other days it’s sandwiches, a crockpot meal I started that morning, or leftovers, and that’s the plan on purpose, not a failure.
A few things make this whole system work:
- A good thermos. Soup, pasta, chili, all fair game to eat anywhere.
- A bento snack container. Easy grab and go portions without extra packaging.
- A family-size veggie tray to-go container. I stock this once a week and grab it whenever we’re headed out the door. It works like one giant bento box for the whole family.
- An over the shoulder insulated lunch bag. Big enough to carry food for everyone, so no one’s stuck buying concession stand snacks at $5+ a pop.
That’s how we end up eating soup out of thermoses at volleyball instead of standing in the concession line. It’s not a sacrifice. It’s just what’s in the bag.
If you’ve never tried planning meals around your actual week instead of a recipe, I walk through the whole process in Meal Planning 101: Stop Wasting Your Money on Eating Out.
Let Your Kids Say “No” to Themselves
My favorite line when my kids ask me if they can get something excessive or something they don’t need, “Sure, did you bring your money?”
My kids still get treats. Sometimes, they pay for them with their own money. Don’t get me wrong, I’ll take them for a coffee, donut, or ice cream at least once a week. I also make sure they have everything they need.
Yet, I don’t fork out the cash willy-nilly for all their little asks. I actually say, “yes, you can get it, so long as you pay for it”. Once they had to use money they earned, the constant asking almost disappeared. They think a lot harder about whether they really want that candy bar (or brand-name purse) when it’s coming out of their own pocket instead of mine.
Make them say “no” to themselves. It teaches the value of money in a way that you constantly saying “no” never will.
This tracks with what researchers actually find. Penn State Extension notes that kids form money habits early, largely by watching how the adults around them handle spending and saving, not from a single lecture about money. Giving them their own money to manage is one of the simplest ways to put that into practice.
If you’re looking for more ways for your kids to earn their own spending money, my free printable chore chart is a good place to start.
Slow Down
Here’s a frugal living tip nobody talks about. You don’t have to go to every event, every weekend, every single time.
Let your kids be bored sometimes. Swap the expensive outing for free time with friends instead. One of our favorite low-cost traditions is a pantry potluck. Everyone brings whatever they already have on hand, and it’s honestly amazing what a full meal we can pull together just by combining what’s already sitting in our cabinets.

Use What’s Already Free
The library is one of the most underused resources for a busy family. Books, obviously, but also teen nights, craft days, and all kinds of free programs most people never think to check for.
If you haven’t looked at your library’s calendar lately, it’s worth five minutes.
My favorite library program is their community access program, where you can usually get free tickets to places like the science museum, the zoo, or even the local theater.
Normalize Buying Used
I started taking my kids to consignment shops and thrift stores when they were young, so it never felt like a downgrade. It’s just how we shop.
For specialty gear, like ski equipment, I search eBay for nice brands at steep discounts. The same goes for trendy name-brand items my kids want. Kids grow so stinking fast that buying new rarely makes financial sense anyway, and buying used is better for the planet too.

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A Few More Small Habits Worth Trying
Here’s a handful of other small things that have made a real difference for us too:
Swap instead of buy. Back when I homeschooled, a group of us moms used to swap homeschool items instead of buying new. Curriculum, books, supplies, all passed around instead of purchased fresh. The same idea works for kids’ clothes or toys with any group of moms you trust.
Move your savings somewhere you can’t see it. We transfer our savings first, into an account that’s completely separate from our checking account. Having it out of sight makes pulling from it feel like a real decision instead of something you do without thinking.
Turn leftovers into “snack supper.” Once a week, whatever’s left in the fridge becomes dinner. We call it snack supper, or “snack lunch”, depending on the day. It’s basically a charcuterie board of whatever we’ve got, just a lot less fancy. Nothing goes to waste, and nobody has to cook.

Try a no-spend weekend. We do these occasionally, just to reset and notice our normal spending habits. Once a year, we go bigger with a full no-spend month, mostly focused on groceries. I call it “freezer cleanout”, though the pantry gets emptied out right along with it.
Add friction to impulse buys. When I’m really cutting back, I delete the Amazon app from my home screen. I still use it, but I have to find it online, which slows me down enough to think twice. I also deleted my card from autofill. These are small changes, but they give you just enough pause to catch yourself.
Small Habits, Not a Whole New Life
None of this requires a total lifestyle overhaul. It’s a thermos instead of a concession line. A pantry potluck instead of a night out. A trip to the library instead of another paid activity.
That’s the whole point. Frugal living tips that actually work for busy moms are the ones you can actually keep doing, week after week, without it feeling like one more thing on your plate.
What’s your version of the thermos at the volleyball game? I’d love to hear about the small habit that’s saved your family money without adding stress to your week. Tell me in the comments.

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