Triangle Town Center holiday coupon books are available starting this weekend.
You can pick one up at the mall, or this year, the coupons are even more accessible because they are available online.
You can find them HERE.
I love it when manufacturers issue really good coupons to go with the launch of a new product.
Case in point: the new Pillsbury Simply Peanut Butter cookie refrigerated dough. This is a new product (just in time for holiday baking) and you can find a $1.25 off ONE coupon HERE.
Now if I can just get some Super Doubles, I will be all set...
Just a friendly reminder that Wednesday is the deadline for early registration for our upcoming coupon class on Nov. 21!
I will be teaching about coupons, rebates and meal planning with Faye Prosser, author of "The Smart Spending Guide."
This will be the last coupon class we offer this year, so don't miss it!
Through Wednesday, registration is open to N&O subscribers only and is $10 per person.
Starting Thursday, registration opens to everyone, but the cost goes up to $15.
So don't dally! Get your early registration in now! CLICK HERE
The deadline for all registration is Nov. 18.
There's a fabulous Internet printable coupon from Huggies out there.
It's $2 off your next purchase of ANY one Huggies Diaper product.
Most computers will let you print two.
And there's also a separate coupon for $2 off any Huggies Jumbo pack or larger HERE.
ConAgra has an online game called the Recession Payback game. If you play online, at the end you will be given the opportunity to register for offers from ConAgra as well as instant access to a couple of coupons for ConAgra brands. Those would include Hunt's, Manwich, Reddi-Wip, Marie Callender and Chef Boyardee.
If you have a couple of minutes, it might be fun and worth it for the coupons.
It looks like there are some new printable coupons at coupons.com, including a super great 75-cent coupon for Del Monte whole pineapples.
These have been on sale lately, and if you're at a store that doubles coupons, that's a good discount!
Just a friendly reminder that time is running out to sign up for my next coupon class on Nov. 21 at Meredith College here in Raleigh.
Come learn about saving money using coupons, how to do rebates and meal-planning to maximize all of your frugal buys.
Faye Prosser, author of "The Smart Spending Guide," will join me for the half-day seminar.
Registration is open to subscribers only until Nov. 4 and then it will be opened up to everyone after that. The final day to register is Nov. 18. Click here to register!
Don't dally!
If you've ever seen a coupon printed from a Web site and wondered if it was legit, here's a little trick. Most of the major coupon printing Web sites use special coding for each coupon that is printed. It's a bunch of numbers and is called the Veri-Fi code (most coupons also have a little Veri-Fi logo on the right hand side). You can go to this Web site and enter the code from a coupon and find out if it's real. If it is, the site verifies it as authentic and even tells you what the text on the coupon should read. Pretty cool!
In general, remember that coupons for totally FREE items or really high-value coupons (like say $6 off a bottle of Tide) are probably fraudulent, and many stores now refuse to take any Internet coupons for FREEs. (BOGOs are still OK in most cases, check your store's coupon policy.)
Here's another good rebate that you should file away as you shop in November.
Buy 10 participating items (Nabisco crackers 7 to 16.5 oz, Easy Cheese, or Planters nuts 9.25 oz to 21.25 oz) and get $10 back by mail. The purchase window has already started, so if you have receipts from earlier this month, those would qualify. You can make purchases through Nov. 30.
Download the form below. And go to this Web site for a printable Nabisco cracker coupon.
If you're a fan of Banana Nut Cheerios, there's a really good matchup this week at Food Lion.
The cereal is buy one get one, and there's a $1 printable coupon HERE. You should be able to print it twice (if you've never printed coupons before you will have to install software). Combined with the sale, that should make the cereal roughly $1 a box.