Everything Finance


How To Cut Down On Transportation Costs

Published on Sep 07 2010 // Written By // Auto Insurance, Personal Finance, Savings

Getting around is getting expensive. Everything is getting expensive for that matter. How did going from point A to Point B get so pricey? Well, that’s a question for the ages.

What matters is that there are ways to save and they are a lot easier than you might expect.

Here are six ways to cut down on transportation costs.

1. Public Transit

Find driving the ol’ hot rod a little too expensive these days? Well… don’t. Public transit may not be flashy and it may not fit your style. But if your wallet is a little light, then it might be time to lock the garage and get in line. The cost of a monthly bus pass is usually less than what you’re paying to park your car near where you work.

2. Maintain Your Vehicle

If public transit cramps your style and you’ve just got to be seen riding around in your automobile, then keep your wheels in tip-top shape. Tire pressure, engine efficiency, no junk in the trunk… these all lead to a well-running machine – a machine that will use less gas while you’re at the wheel and save on costly repairs down the road.

3. Jump Into The Car Pool

Again, if you think that being part of a car pool will hurt your image, then maybe it’s time for a new image. Organize the car pool yourself. Get your friends and co-workers on board. Show the world you care about the planet and you don’t care who knows it.

Plus you’ll be saving money while you’re saving Mother Earth. You can’t lose.

4. G.P…Yes

Much like maintaining your vehicle, it’ll help your wallet, automobile and blood pressure if you know where you’re going when you hit the open road.

It won’t be long before the GPS will replace road maps so you might as well get one now. Even an Agriculture GPS might work.

Planning out the best route to where you’re going will ensure you don’t burn a tank of gas wandering aimlessly.

5. Go Take A Bike

If your friends or better half didn’t have to pry your hands from the steering wheel to get you to save on transportation, then you might be ready to look into alternate transportation.

Bicycles are not just for leisure time anymore. Overpopulation and overcrowding have elevated the bicycle’s importance in the 21st Century. Bikes are a great way to get around.

You keep fit. Parking is a breeze. You don’t pollute and you get a new perspective on where you live. There’s no downside here.

6. These Boots Are Made For Walking

Okay, if you’re serious about saving money on transportation costs. I mean you want to pair your expenses down to the bone, then it’s time to glance down at the two “vehicles” you were born with.

That’s right, the leg brothers: Left and Right. Obviously you can’t walk everywhere, but you can walk to the corner store when you’re out of milk. Or to your best bud’s barbeque two blocks over. The rule here is: if it’s a ten-minute drive away, then walk.

About the author: this article was written by Andrew Salmon from the life insurance website LifeCover.ca. If you’re in need of Universal Life Insurance or other insurance policies visit their website today.

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About

Tushar Mathur has been blogging about Personal Finance since January, 2007. This has helped him recognize what topics readers like and relate to. The goal is to spot good news-worthy info and get it out to the public as soon as possible.Tushar Mathur maintains this Personal Finance blog called Everything Finance. The blog articles fall under these categories: Investing, saving money, shopping, blogging and making money online.


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Penny Stock Blog 5 pts

Its A tough decision to make but I believe that keeping a car that has relatively few problems is always a wise idea. The issue with buying a used car is their is is no warranty on anything that is defective. Unlike a new car. Its a close call But I would say its a draw as far as saving money goes that is I do not think owning a used car is at a advantage over buying a new car and keeping it for 10 12 or 15 years assuming you are retired and pay cash for a brand new car. If you take good care of a car from the time you buy it brand new it could last 15 years so the price of buying it brand new would only be a small part of your total cost over time. One fifthteeth of say fifthteen thousand dollars for a small or mid size car with not a lot of stuff on it is only seven hundred fifty dollars a year reallly not all that much money. If you go though two or even three used cars over a fifteen year period how much is that going to cost.

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