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I thought it was a good time to update where I am in regard to Christmas monies.
After all, Christmas is only 103 days away and the shopping rush begins 75 days from now...yikes!
I don't DO Black Friday btw....ok, sometimes I DO do BF online but never in a store. I try to do a good part of my shopping by early November or sooner anyway.
Heck Dec. 26th of 2013 was when I bought my first gifts for Christmas 2014. lolz
I pick up deals throughout the year when I see them. Having extra cash in your budget throughout the year helps you get stuff when it's cheapest.
I try to avoid going into stores(other than Rite-Aid and the grocery stores)between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
I went through the "gift acquisitions in my closet" yesterday too. Everything is now in a big box labeled "Xmas gifts" and ready to be wrapped and/or shipped once December gets here.
So far I have in gifts.....
Hubs Stocking Stuff Done
#2 Son Stocking Stuff Done
Daughter Stocking Stuff Done
#1 Son Stocking Stuff Done(He got his main present already.)
#1 Son's GF Done
Hub's Sister Done
Brother Done
Sister In-law Done
Brother In-law Done
The left to buy List....
#2 Son
Daughter
Her BF
Hubs
This short list will run me about $400 and doesn't include all the other spending categories at Christmas-food, travel, outings, etc.
I have $146.50 in rolled coins to cash in and if I redeem all my c/c points as of now I would get back $875 in gift cards.
Now the problem I have with this arrangement(lots of gift cards, little cash)is that nowadays my kids want cash, not gift cards. Cash doesn't limit them in where they get to spend it, gift cards do.
At their ages(at least the older two), they should be glad I still buy them stuff! 8-)
I thought about cashing in the c/c points for gift cards and then selling them on one of those sites where you can do this.
But I'd get less than what they are worth(and I'm already taking a "hit" as these are c/c points)and this would require "work" on my part and waiting to see if they sell. Too big a hassle for me.
Instead I can just request the gift cards to places Hubs and I shop and purchase stuff we need instead of buying gifts.
In 2012 I made a $1,000 Christmas spending budget. That's for everything Christmas related from electricity for running lights, to special outings to gifts to food.
In 2013 I made a $1,650 Christmas spending budget. We spent more in 2013 because we traveled during the holidays to go visit #1 Son and we had to pay for gas, meals and motels.
In 2014 I plan to reduce the Christmas spending budget. I have $146.50 and as much of that $875 in gift cards I choose to use saved so far.
We NEVER go into debt for Holiday spending. And neither should you! ;-) The best way is to have a budget, plan ahead to save or decide where your Christmas funds will come from and keep what you spend on the low side and commensurate with your income.
I have plenty to cover gifts(with the gift cards)but I need to come up with more cash.
I can yank some of the funds from selling off my fabric stash on Etsy this year. That would give me another $450 or so.
And there is also $209.18 from blog income for this year I can pull from as well.
That gives me $805.68 in cash(not counting the $875 in gift cards).
Adding up all these sources I can readily cover the Holiday expenses whatever they turn out to be this year.
And just in case we go over I still have a piece of Hub's bonus left that I can spend. 8-)
If we don't travel for the Holidays, I'm thinking of trying for an $800 budget. If we travel it's going to look more like a $1300 budget.
At this point we don't have plans to travel during the Holidays but that could change.
Gregory Karp, a personal finance expert, says you should only spend as much as 1.5% of your family's gross income on Christmas gifts.
Take note.....this is for Gifts only.
I think 1.5% of gross income for Christmas spending is a good measure, but I'd say this should be for ALL your Holiday associated spending, not just for gifts. Gift giving is only 1 piece of the Christmas spending pie.
Mmmm......pie.......
You can see a set of statistics from American Research Group, Inc. for 2013 Christmas HERE. Note that this just includes gift spending.
So how much do you plan on spending this year for the Holidays?
Do you budget a certain amount for your Christmas spending?
Or do you just spend whatever you feel like?
And if you budget, what categories do you spend on within that budget?
Do you save all year to cover your Holiday spending?
How do you save for it?
Sluggy
I thought it was a good time to update where I am in regard to Christmas monies.
After all, Christmas is only 103 days away and the shopping rush begins 75 days from now...yikes!
I don't DO Black Friday btw....ok, sometimes I DO do BF online but never in a store. I try to do a good part of my shopping by early November or sooner anyway.
Heck Dec. 26th of 2013 was when I bought my first gifts for Christmas 2014. lolz
I pick up deals throughout the year when I see them. Having extra cash in your budget throughout the year helps you get stuff when it's cheapest.
I try to avoid going into stores(other than Rite-Aid and the grocery stores)between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
I went through the "gift acquisitions in my closet" yesterday too. Everything is now in a big box labeled "Xmas gifts" and ready to be wrapped and/or shipped once December gets here.
So far I have in gifts.....
Hubs Stocking Stuff Done
#2 Son Stocking Stuff Done
Daughter Stocking Stuff Done
#1 Son Stocking Stuff Done(He got his main present already.)
#1 Son's GF Done
Hub's Sister Done
Brother Done
Sister In-law Done
Brother In-law Done
The left to buy List....
#2 Son
Daughter
Her BF
Hubs
This short list will run me about $400 and doesn't include all the other spending categories at Christmas-food, travel, outings, etc.
I have $146.50 in rolled coins to cash in and if I redeem all my c/c points as of now I would get back $875 in gift cards.
Now the problem I have with this arrangement(lots of gift cards, little cash)is that nowadays my kids want cash, not gift cards. Cash doesn't limit them in where they get to spend it, gift cards do.
At their ages(at least the older two), they should be glad I still buy them stuff! 8-)
I thought about cashing in the c/c points for gift cards and then selling them on one of those sites where you can do this.
But I'd get less than what they are worth(and I'm already taking a "hit" as these are c/c points)and this would require "work" on my part and waiting to see if they sell. Too big a hassle for me.
Instead I can just request the gift cards to places Hubs and I shop and purchase stuff we need instead of buying gifts.
In 2012 I made a $1,000 Christmas spending budget. That's for everything Christmas related from electricity for running lights, to special outings to gifts to food.
In 2013 I made a $1,650 Christmas spending budget. We spent more in 2013 because we traveled during the holidays to go visit #1 Son and we had to pay for gas, meals and motels.
In 2014 I plan to reduce the Christmas spending budget. I have $146.50 and as much of that $875 in gift cards I choose to use saved so far.
We NEVER go into debt for Holiday spending. And neither should you! ;-) The best way is to have a budget, plan ahead to save or decide where your Christmas funds will come from and keep what you spend on the low side and commensurate with your income.
I have plenty to cover gifts(with the gift cards)but I need to come up with more cash.
I can yank some of the funds from selling off my fabric stash on Etsy this year. That would give me another $450 or so.
And there is also $209.18 from blog income for this year I can pull from as well.
That gives me $805.68 in cash(not counting the $875 in gift cards).
Adding up all these sources I can readily cover the Holiday expenses whatever they turn out to be this year.
And just in case we go over I still have a piece of Hub's bonus left that I can spend. 8-)
If we don't travel for the Holidays, I'm thinking of trying for an $800 budget. If we travel it's going to look more like a $1300 budget.
At this point we don't have plans to travel during the Holidays but that could change.
Gregory Karp, a personal finance expert, says you should only spend as much as 1.5% of your family's gross income on Christmas gifts.
Take note.....this is for Gifts only.
I think 1.5% of gross income for Christmas spending is a good measure, but I'd say this should be for ALL your Holiday associated spending, not just for gifts. Gift giving is only 1 piece of the Christmas spending pie.
Mmmm......pie.......
You can see a set of statistics from American Research Group, Inc. for 2013 Christmas HERE. Note that this just includes gift spending.
So how much do you plan on spending this year for the Holidays?
Do you budget a certain amount for your Christmas spending?
Or do you just spend whatever you feel like?
And if you budget, what categories do you spend on within that budget?
Do you save all year to cover your Holiday spending?
How do you save for it?
Sluggy