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Cut the cost of shopping for Christmas gifts

Follow our famous five-step action plan to save hundreds of pounds shopping for Christmas gifts.

It's the start of December so, naturally, astronaught Santas loom overhead on my walk to work. When I get home, I am forced to watch B-list celebrities selling frozen food in Christmas TV ads. And wherever I go, jingly jingles – possibly about jingle bells - jingle and jangle all day long in my ears.

’Tis the season to be jolly but, like me, you may well dread this time of year. The hustle, the bustle, the unrelenting, unavoidable kerfuffle. The ridiculously over-priced tat you are forced to fork out for. And, at the end of it, a big empty hole in your bank balance.

Especially right now, when we’re all feeling the pinch.

Luckily, thanks to the rise of internet shopping, it’s easy to avoid the Christmas shopping crowds. But what about cutting your costs? Do you know how to hunt down the biggest online bargains – and get discounts even when none appear to be on offer?

As loyal readers will know, here at lovemoney.com we have developed a five-step process you can use to fight back against the Christmas shopping nightmare – and save yourself hundreds of pounds into the bargain. (I followed it, last year, and it really does work!)

Step 1: Get the right credit card

The first step to cost-effective Christmas shopping is to figure out which type of credit card you should use for your Christmas shopping purchases. There are two options and, in different circumstances, both should save you money.

If you have money in the bank to pay for all your purchases, the best option is to get a cashback credit card. This allows you to earn cashback on everything you spend – but it is only a good idea if you can pay off the balance in full every month, as otherwise you will pay far more in interest than you will earn in cashback.

There are a few cards worth considering here. First up, there's the Capital One World MasterCard, which offers 5% cashback on purchases in your first three months (up to a maximum of £100) and up to 1.25% thereafter.

A good alternative comes from American Express, which pays 2.5% in the first three months up to £100, and up to 1.25% after that. For a good comparison of how much cashback you can make with the various cards, check out New cashback card shakes up the market.

However, American Express isn't accepted everywhere. A good alternative is the Egg Money World Mastercard, which pays a flat rate of 1% up to a maximum cashback of £200. Just be aware there is a monthly £1 charge for this card.

If, however, you don’t have money in the bank to pay for all your purchases immediately, then the best option is a 0% on purchases card. With these cards, you won’t pay any interest on your purchases as long as you clear your debt within a set period.

The best card around at the moment is the Tesco Clubcard Credit card, which offers 0% on purchases for 15 months.Other cards worth considering include the M&S credit card, offering 15 months, and the Barclaycard Platinum, which offers 14 months free of interest.

Step 2: Use a shop-bot

You can find out where the item you want to buy is cheapest using a shop-bot, which compares the prices of the item across different shops on the internet.

Shop-bots we like here at lovemoney.com include: Kelkoo, Pricerunner and find-dvd.co.uk. You can also download the Invisible Hand tool, which sits in the background of your web browser, but then highlights the cheapest place to find an item whenever you write it in a search engine or on a website.

Just remember to check whether there are any delivery costs too as this may not be clear from the table of results.

If there are several shops offering the item at around the same price, make a mental note of all of them. You may find one retailer is even cheaper the others after going through steps 3 and 4.

Step 3: Register with a cashback website

Next, find a cashback site that is affiliated with the merchant you want to buy from.

This will allow you to earn cashback on transactions you make through the site. Find out more about how cashback websites work in How to be a cashback king!

Quidco is perhaps the most well-known cashback website, and is affiliated with the vast majority of merchants. 

However, this site will keep £5 of your cashback once a year as an annual charge.

Others, such as Top Cashback and GreasyPalm, are free to join and use, but may not always have as good cashback deals as Quidco.

If you have time, it’s worth checking them all out to figure which site is best to use for each purchase.

Step 4: Find a voucher code

Most online retailers offer you the chance to type in a promotional voucher code before you purchase your item.

To find one of these codes, have a hunt around on the internet.

First, look through the various forums on the internet where members share their vouchers. The best, in my opinion, is hotukdeals.com. I’ve found several useful vouchers on there, and saved myself at least £50 over the past year by doing so. You can search by retailer, and others rank the vouchers according to how hot the discount is.

But it’s not the only decent discounts site around. Other sites worth checking out include myvouchercodes.co.uk, vouchercodes.com and piggy-code.co.uk.

If you can’t find a voucher that way, don’t forget you can always just try a Google search. Type in ‘voucher’ and then the name of the merchant and see what happens.

Step 5: Go bargain-shopping!

These four steps are all very well if you know in advance what item you want to buy. But what if you don’t? Where should you go to find a bargain?

Here at lovemoney.com, we have two blogs which could save you a fortune. For the best shopping discounts and deals, be sure to read Frugal Friday, while Frugal Food rounds up the best deals on food, whether you're cooking yourself or headed to a nice restaurant. Subscribers get both blogs in their email inbox every Friday lunchtime, but  there's lots of things you can do to identify great deals.

For example, you could:

  • have a hunt around on pricecutreview.com/uk for details of the biggest discounts on goods from Amazon.
  • check out the hottest deals of the week on the forums mentioned above, such as Hotukdeals.com.
  • set up a new email address specifically for your shopping and join the mailing lists of all your favourite stores. Often they send out promotional codes and special offers in these emails.

Alternatively, if this seems like too much hassle, you could just keep an eye out on Friday for our weekly email!

This is a lovemoney.com classic article, updated for 2011.

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Comments



  • 03 December 2011

    Most young children spend longer playing with the cardboard box than tehtoy in it. That says a lot to me. Christmas is a wonderful time- for the Chinese! Thousands of containers being steamed over the world to Harwich, driven by lorry to our shopping centres and then driven home to our homes and left in a cupboard until thrown away. That is how to run an economy and use the maximum oil you can. Better to make your own toys out of wood ( FSC of course) and these can be used over agin by the next generation. Consumerism at its worse is Christams. I get my drink from Calais and use Tesco vouchers to get a Eurotunnel day trip, at least I am not contributing to the Chancellor's ever groaing grab at the drinks' market. Lidl still have some bargain food if you want a festive meal.

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  • 02 December 2011

    Donna, just to make sure we are on the same page and not the original one, it's 2011. For those who do not want to buy overpriced tat I have suggested buying only for kids. One of my friends has 4 sisters and they restrict themselves to something small for 3 of them and a big one for the fourth. So each gets a big one. So the youngest buys for the eldest then next year the second eldest etc. I like to give each of my friends something so we have a cap of £5 and have to be really ingenious, one year one of them baked me a cake that I adore, yummy. It can also be done for young children, they have no idea what something costs. Older children can be restricted or given money/vouchers. It doesn't have to be much and can be given with a token present. Primark does some lovely household stuff as well as clothes. I often buy something from a charity (the shops all do new items) or from an online one. You can buy some nice stuff reasonably or give a donation in someone's name if they support one. Now, having said all of this, you can look on sites such as free fivers where they list specials or can buy it through one that donates to charity when you buy something. Saving money isn't just about using sites, it's about thinking carefully, planning ahead (I used to buy one thing a month to help spread things out) or putting money into a savings account for Xmas so that you have the interest to help, shopping around on ebay, amazon and, as mentioned above, google searching, it's amazing the price differences. Even look in jewellers windows as they often reduce an item to half price which makes it reasonable. Try using a Tesco card all as it gives you extra points and you can save up the vouchers for a big food shop at the end of the year, toys or clothes etc. Boots do advantage points, Sainsburys and Homebase do nectar points, Superdrug does something, all of these can be saved during the year when buying essentials and used to buy pressies. Have fun and try not to do an impulse buy unless the shop will refund.

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  • 02 December 2010

    Thanks for the compliment Kipperman.  I can see where you are coming from but the information has been completely updated for 2010 and everything in it is still as relevant. Many people have joined lovemoney.com since it was first published and after all this is a free site so we don't have an unlimited budget.

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