Tricks to help you spend less money at restaurants

Tricks to help you spend less money at restaurants

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Dining at restaurants can be a tasty experience. It can also be a pricey one.

That’s one reason why fewer people are going out to eat. A YouGov report from October found that 37% of American diners said they were eating out less often than they had a year earlier, driven away by high menu prices and a desire to save money. Only 8% said they were dining out more.

Yet many of us will do it anyway, whether to get a break from cooking a meal at home or as a way to spend time with friends and family. Eating at restaurants may even boost our mental health.

Luckily for us, personal finance and nutrition experts say there are some simple strategies that make it possible to eat out without spending a fortune.

Think about why you’re dining out

Is your goal to try a buzzy new restaurant? Or are you just going out to eat to socialize?

Kimberly Palmer, a personal finance expert at NerdWallet, says determining why you’re eating out can help you choose a restaurant that meets your needs and doesn’t cause you to overspend.

“You might be getting just as much value and enjoyment by going out for a less expensive pizza than a nicer restaurant,” Palmer says, “so just putting some time into thinking about why you’re going out, what you want to get out of it, that can help guide your decisions.”

Give yourself a restaurant budget

Personal finance experts say it’s also worth looking back at how much you’ve been spending on food outside your home. That way you have a starting point to create a dining-out budget. (If you use the 50-30-20 method of budgeting, restaurant trips would fall in the 30% discretionary spending category.)

Whatever budget you choose for dining out, financial counselor Lindsay Plumb says it’s critical to separate it from your grocery money.

“My grocery money does not touch, I call it, our ‘spend-with-joy’ money,” Plumb says. “The spend-with-joy money I get to spend truly with joy, not worry about whether or not I can pay my mortgage or buy the groceries or if the kids need cleats.”

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