![]() ![]() However, since I was starting my stockpile well in advance, I lowered my target buy price to. What I found most useful about this article was the approximate diaper usage and buy price. This was one of the first articles I read and the one I returned to many times as a reference. ![]() How to Save Money & Build a Diaper Stockpile (includes approximate diaper usage for 1st year!) There are many great articles and blog posts about how to efficiently stockpile diapers, so instead of reiterating those, I’ve linked to the two I found most useful and provided a few of my own notes: Since I started stockpiling about 10 months ago, I’ve been able to collect about 3,424 of the approximately 4,000 diapers we will need from birth to potty training! And so far, I’ve only spent $339.58! We are opting to use disposable, so I knew that this was one area I could begin preparing for (without feeling ridiculous!) even before we were pregnant. Whether you choose to use disposable or cloth is completely a matter of personal preference and lifestyle, but from my research, both can be pricey in their own ways. There are many unnecessary expenses you can avoid with babies, but unfortunately diapers are not one of them. I mentioned, though, that the one big expense that was not included on the spreadsheet was the cost of our diaper stockpile. In this first part of this little series, I explained our process for cash-flowing all baby expenses, and provided a spreadsheet that breaks out exactly how much we spent out-of-pocket. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |