Monday, July 25, 2016

Finally Cashing in that Coin Jar



When I was young, my parents had an empty water cooler bottle that they would use to collect coins. We would save all year then turn the coins in to a local counter machine to use on our annual family vacation. I still remember the excitement we had at learning how much we saved. The purpose of it was to have disposable cash on-hand. This isn't a bad thing, but since we spent it readily, I did not equate this simple method as a way to generate any long-term savings. Now that I'm in charge of my family's finances, I take a slightly different approach.

The coin jar above followed us through three moves, but has rarely been full enough to empty. When living in the city, I avoided picking up change from subway platforms. Better to leave that quarter near the puddle of unknown sludge. Whenever I broke a bill and made change, I quickly found ways to spend get rid of it because it was easier to swipe my credit card than fumble through a wallet in a crowded area. Better to leave the spare cash in a tip jar than carry around annoying pennies. It's better than getting robbed because someone saw a flash of a $20 and thought you were rolling in it, but failed to realize that's the first Andrew Jackson you've seen all month. Amirite?

This mindset was wasteful. 

Over the past year, I made a concentrated effort to liberate coins from our couch cushions, rescue dropped dimes from under the car floor mat, and empty pennies from seldom used handbags and wallets. My life is more settled now. Change has a way of floating around more easily and getting found.

Better to save it.

Personally, I don't use third-party coin counter machines at local grocery stores. They take a fairly hefty percentage of your earnings, sometimes as much as 5% or more. Instead, I cash in at my local bank branch, despite wariness over any of their more "official" machines shortchanging clients. The only foolproof method would be to fill your own coin roll wrappers. I have not gone that far yet.

Let me say that the bank teller who assisted me was very detail-oriented. She snagged a loose button, zipper pull, and some random string bits from the jar as she poured the change in to the coin sorter. She was lightning fast. During that process, my husband asked how much we collected. 

My guess: $178.00
Actual...

$178.39!

How was that even possible?! Someone sign me up for The Price is Right. Mama would like a new Corvette, a dishwasher, and door prize. Right meow. 

I took the $0.39 and put it back into the coin jar to start anew. We split the proceeds in half. I put a quarter of it towards a night out and the rest in savings. My next move? Transfer those savings into a higher yield investment account. Earning $0.01 in interest on each dollar is not acceptable anymore.

Do you have a coin jar? How do you use your saved change?

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