STUFF THAT

I paid off £8,000 of debt in two years and saved £7,000 using the cash stuffing method

A SAVVY saver paid off thousands of pound of debt and saved up a £7,000 emergency fund in just one year using a new budgeting trend.

Euphemia Moore, 38, was a single mum with £12,000 worth of debt when she started using a budgeting technique called cash stuffing in December 2019.

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Euphemia Moore runs a financial Youtube channel called She's On A Budget

But since then, the former science teacher from London has managed to reduced her eight debts to one outstanding payment of £4,000.

This year she was also able to save up £7,000 for emergencies and special occasions, as well as quitting her job to become her own boss.

Cash stuffing is a method of budgeting that involves withdrawing money from your account and physically allocating it to different spending pots.

The method is popular on TikTok and Youtube, with financial influencers sharing how they budget their cash by “stuffing” it in envelopes earmarked for certain things.

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For example, you could have an envelope for food shopping, nights out, clothes and travel. 

If you have a hobby or are saving for a holiday, you could include a section for those expenditures.

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Fans of the method also have long-term "sinking funds" to cover everything from Christmas and birthdays to car maintenance.

But keeping money in cash means savers miss out on earning interest.

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, said: "The way I was able to put money into sinking funds was by reducing my grocery bill, and at times I was eating beans and rice every day, or pasta every day.

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