Unless you're lazy and rich (or just busy and rich), there's no
excuse for paying full price. These days, it seems, everything's on
sale somewhere. But to get the best buys on basics like toilet
paper, lightbulbs, and bottled water, you have to religiously read
circulars and methodically clip coupons, then make time-consuming
pit stops at several stores.
Or...you can shop at a warehouse club. Some 75 million Americans
now pay an annual fee to belong to one of these stores Sam's Club,
Costco Wholesale Corporation, BJ's Wholesale Club where prices are
uniformly low because you're buying in bulk.
To find out just how
much can be saved at one, Real Simple visited a Sam's Club in
Elmsford, New York, to shop for name-brand nonperishables that can
be stockpiled in the pantry, garage, or basement. We then took the
same list of 15 items to a Super Stop & Shop supermarket in nearby
White Plains, New York. (We also brought this shopping list to a
Sam's Club and a supermarket in the Chicago suburbs.) All items were bought in the smallest sizes
available; since supermarkets rarely sell items in warehouse-size
packages, the supermarket prices are based on the purchase of an
equivalent quantity in the largest sizes available.
And yes, you
do save a bundle by consuming in quantity. Here, find out exactly how
much.