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Millennial Money: 3 ways to save money in a high-cost city

Traditional money-saving advice may not cut it if you live in one of America鈥檚 most expensive cities or urban areas. Residents of New York City, San Francisco, Honolulu, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C.
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FILE - Light from the setting sun reflects off the buildings in the borough of Manhattan in New York City, as seen from the Weehawken Pier in Weehawken, N.J., on Wednesday, March 22, 2023. Living in a high-cost city can strain your finances, but three tips can help you thrive. Consider shopping at wholesale stores for groceries, even if you don鈥檛 have a car. Take advantage of discounts that cultural institutions such as museums and theaters often offer to residents through a city ID or library card. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey, File)

Traditional money-saving advice may not cut it if you live in one of America鈥檚 most expensive cities or urban areas. Residents of New York City, San Francisco, Honolulu, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and Orange County, California, among others, are for housing, utilities, groceries, transportation, health care, and other goods and services.

There is a silver lining, though: High-cost cities can come with unique opportunities to save, such as housing lotteries, discounted tickets to cultural institutions for residents, and specialty grocery stores and farmers markets.

STREAMLINE YOUR GROCERY ROUTINE

It can be more convenient to shop for groceries weekly at a traditional grocery store, but if you鈥檙e looking to cut costs in an expensive city, it may be worth the extra effort to shop wholesale and supplement with smaller, budget-friendly trips to the local grocery store.

鈥淪hopping at Costco has made it really stark how much of a markup I accepted on groceries,鈥 says Kyle Henson,a regional sales manager in New York who purchases food, household goods and even clothes at the wholesale store. He鈥檚 even invested in the store鈥檚 executive membership, which gets him and anyone who uses his card access to any Costco location and 2% cash back on purchases.

It鈥檚 easier to shop wholesale if you have a car, but if you don鈥檛 have a car Henson suggests taking public transit one way and a rideshare service or taxi on the way back, or even using Costco鈥檚 discounted rental car service to make the trip.

鈥淚鈥檒l go to Costco with a couple of friends, completely load up and then split everything,鈥 says Vishal Vaidya, a cook in New York. Vaidya doesn鈥檛 have his own membership, but he can use Costco gift cards to shop in-store as a nonmember.

For non-bulk items such as fresh produce and meat, Vaidya adds small grocery trips to his daily routine. He shops at places he knows have good deals on specific items. If he鈥檚 passing through a neighborhood with Halal butchers, for example, he鈥檒l pick up a cut of meat; when out on the weekends, he鈥檒l stop by a farmers market on his way home.

鈥淚鈥檝e integrated these habits into my lifestyle,鈥 Vaidya explains. Because he mostly cooks at home, he says that groceries are the primary way he saves money and that being frugal about food allows him to be more flexible in other areas of his life.

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF LOCAL DISCOUNTS

Living in a big city may come with higher rent and food costs, but it can also come with access to great cultural institutions. Museums, movies and shows can be pricey, but city residents can sometimes secure free or discounted tickets.

In many cities, popular museums offer free entry for residents on certain days of the week, and some even have monthly free days for all visitors. For institutions that don鈥檛 advertise free admission, programs such as Culture Pass in New York and Discover & Go in Los Angeles give library card holders access to free and discounted tickets to museums and cultural centers.

鈥淚 assumed most cultural institutions would be free in New York, and I was very disappointed to find out that they weren鈥檛,鈥 Vaidya says. Museums were a big draw for him when moving to the city, and he quickly signed up for a library card and Culture Pass access. He sets a monthly reminder to reserve his tickets and uses the website to discover lesser-known gardens, galleries and shows.

PLAY THE HOUSING LOTTERY

for residents of cities with a high cost of living. However, there are affordable-housing lottery programs in many major cities, which can ease the financial burden.

鈥淚t鈥檚 surprisingly easy,鈥 says Thomas Van de Pas, a bartender in New York who has won the city鈥檚 housing lottery three times. Housing lotteries typically incentivize developers with higher building size limits, tax breaks or lower-cost loans in exchange for reserving a portion of new housing developments for the lottery. Rent-stabilized units are available for applicants in specific income brackets.

Los Angeles, for example, reserves affordable housing units for those it considers 鈥渧ery low income鈥 (about $44,000 per year for one person). But other cities, such as New York and Washington, D.C., have options for applicants well over the area鈥檚 median income 鈥 as high as $163,000 per year per person in New York, or $186,000 per couple.

Your odds may be better if you鈥檙e an existing resident of the neighborhood. In New York, for example, 50% of city-financed units are reserved for residents of a given Community Board, which is a grouping of several neighborhoods.

Van de Pas recommends applying well before your current lease ends because applications are accepted on a rolling basis. 鈥淵ou may have to be flexible and break your current lease if you get a good deal,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 willing to pay the upfront cost of getting out of my lease, because I鈥檓 getting a unit below market rate.鈥

As with groceries, seeking discounts on housing can take some extra effort, but that temporary inconvenience may help save you much more in the long run.

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This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance website NerdWallet. The content is for educational and informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice. Dalia Ramirez is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: [email protected].

RELATED LINKS:

NerdWallet: How much money should I spend on rent?

C2ER Quarter 2, 2023 Cost of Living Index:

Dalia Ramirez Of Nerdwallet, The Associated Press

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