Extreme Couponers Are Extreme Wasters

Over the past two years I've written several times about extreme couponing and buying in bulk. It's a hot topic. Everyone wants to save money where they can and the grocery store is not immune to that fact.

My opinion on the fad (and it is just that) is slightly more horrified than excited. To me a show like TLC's Extreme Couponers is just an episode of hoarding done with groceries. The characters on these shows are INSANE. They dumpster dive, they spend 40+ hours a week working on their trips, they create elaborate filing systems for their coupons, and stress themselves and their family members out with their crazy behaviors and habits.

Every show or documentary I watch about creating a grocery stockpile makes me shake my head in disappointment. It's not because I think they spend WAY too much time on their task or because they go to extreme measures to find good deals, it's because I think of how much of their money they are wasting.

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And, yes, these people are ABSOLUTELY wasting their money. Creating a stockpile of goods through the use of coupons can be good, but not the way it is portrayed on TV currently. These contestants are doing it all wrong.

How are they doing it wrong? They are stockpiling goods that will expire on them before they use them. And no matter how good of a deal you got it for, if you have to throw it out because the item has expired or gone bad, then you have wasted your money. I've never seen anybody on TV check the expiration or shelf life of an item before putting every last one of them in their cart. Items like cereal, pasta, batteries and even toothpaste have a shelf life. Some shorter than others.

I've compiled a list of expiration dates on items we use every day. Take a look, before you fill your cart with 30 tubes of toothpaste or 50 boxes of pasta.

Aerosol Air Freshener

2 years

Antifreeze

1 to 5 years

Baking Powder/Soda

18 months

Bar of Soap

18 months to 3 years

Batteries(alkaline)

7 years

Batteries (lithium)

10 years

Beer

Unopened 4 months

Bleach

3 to 6 months

Body Wash

3 years

Bread Crumbs

6 months

Brown Sugar

4 months

Butter, Margarine

6 to 9 months

Cake Mix

1 year

Cereal

6 months

Cheese, hard

6 months

Conditioner and Shampoo

2 to 3 years

Chicken, kept frozen

6 to 9 months

Deodorant

Unopened 2 years. Used 1 to 2 years

Dish Soap

1 year

Dried pasta

1 to 3 years

Eggs, kept refrigerated

3 to 5 weeks

Facial Lotion

3 years

Fire extinguisher

6 to 12 years

Foundation

2 to 3 years

Frozen Dinner

Unopened 12 to 18 months

Ground Beef

3 to 4 months

Hair spray and gel

2 to 3 years

Honey

Indefinite

Ice Cream

1 month

Laundry Detergent (liquid or powder)

Unopened 9 months to 1 year. Opened 6 months

Lipstick

2 years

Lotion

3 years

Maple Syrup

1 year

Maraschino Cherries

Unopened 3 to 4 years. Opened 2 weeks at room temperature, 6 months refrigerated

Marshmallows

Unopened 40 weeks. Opened 3 months

Mayonnaise

Unopened indefinitely. Opened 2 to 3 months from "purchase by" date

Mascara

Unopened 2 years. Opened 3 to 4 months

Metal polish

At least 3 years

Miracle Grow

Opened 3 to 8 years

Motor oil

Unopened 2 to 5 years. Opened 3 months

Mouthwash

3 years

Mr. Clean

2 years

Mustard

2 years

Nail Polish

1 year

Nail Polish Remover

Indefinitely

Olive Oil

2 years from manufacturer's date

Paint

Unopened up to 10 years. Opened 2 to 5 years

Peanuts

Unopened 1 to 2 years unless frozen or refrigerated. Opened 1 to 2 weeks in airtight container

Peanut Butter

Unopened 2 years. Opened 6 months, refrigerate after 3 months

Perfume

1 to 2 years

Pickles

18 months

Pledge wood polish

2 years

Pork chops, kept frozen

4 to 6 months

Pudding mix

1 year

Rubbing Alcohol

3 years

Salad Dressing

Unopened 12 months after "best by" date. Opened 9 months refrigerated

Shaving Cream

2 years

Soda (glass or cans)

9 months from "best by" date

Soft Drink (from a plastic jug)

Unopened 3 months from "best by" date

Soy Sauce

Unopened 2 years. Opened 3 months

Spices, dried herbs

1 to 3 years

Spray paint

2 to 3 years

Steaks, kept frozen

6 to 12 months

Steak Sauce

33 months

Sugar, granulated

2 years

Syrups

1 year

Tabasco Sauce

5 years

Teeth Whitening Strips

13 months

Tuna (canned)

Unopened 1 year from purchase date. Opened 3 to 4 days

White Rice

2 years

Windex

2 years

Wine (red or white)

Unopened 3 years from vintage date, 20 to 100 years for fine wines. Opened 1 week refrigerated, must be corked

Worcestershire Sauce

Unopened 5 to 10 years. Opened 2 years

Vegetables, frozen

8 months

Vinegar

42 months

You can see by this list that almost everything DOES have an expiration date. Those people who are buying 30 tubes of toothpaste will never use their entire stockpile before the product expires. They are wasting money by buying too much. Instead they should be buying enough to last them till the next sale or enough to get them through a certain number of months.

Next time you see a good deal on an item check out its expiration date first. Only buy as much as you can use before it goes bad. That way you won't waste your money.

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