Printable CVS item-specific coupons

The May 09 issue of InStyle magazine features 5 CVS in-store coupons, including:

*$1 off Skin Effects Cell Cell CNS
*$1 off any New Neutogena Healthy Skin Liquid Makeuop SPF 20
*$1 off Neutogena Ultra Sheer SPF 100
*$1 off Biore Dual Fusion Moisturizer
*$1 off Garnier Skin Renew Anti-Sun-Damage daily eye Cream SPF 15

Remarkably, they’re also online and printable. Here’s the link. Remember, you can use a CVS in-store coupon AND manufacturer’s coupon on the same item. For example, you can use the $1off Garnier CVS coupon with a $1off Garnier manufacturer’s coupon for double the savings.

How to: Sign Up for the CVS Extra Care Card

The first step to reaping great drugstore deals is signing up for their customer loyalty programs. FatHeadDog’s favorite is the CVS Extra Care program.

Step 1: Sign up for your ExtraCare Card.

This can be done on CVS.com, or you may sign up in a store. Your best bet is to do it in a store so you can begin using your card immediately. If you choose to sign up online, it will take approximately two weeks to receive your card.

Step 2: Study the weekly circulars.

You can pick up a weekly ad in the store or find it in Sunday’s newspaper. You can find highlights of the weekly and monthly store ads on SlickDeals.net. Click on Forums, then Drugstore/Grocery Forum and you’ll find a listing of current weekly ads for CVS, Walgreens and Rite Aid. Tip: You’ll even find ads for the weeks ahead, so you can “study” upcoming deal scenarios.

Step 3: Pick your Extra Buck scenarios.

The most lucrative offers are usually the ones that are already free after ExtraCare Bucks (ECBs). Second best are ECB deals that give you at least 50 percent return for your money. For example, buy $20 worth of Aveeno products and get $10 back in Extra Bucks. With coupons, you can sometimes “break even” by spending $10 and getting $10 ECBs.

Step 4: Go shopping!

The best way to use your Extra Bucks is by purchasing more items that produce Extra Bucks. This is what drugstore pros call “rolling” your ECBs. Using this strategy, you’ll always have a stash of Extra Bucks to save you money on your total out-of-pocket expense.

If you have any questions, feel free to ask! FatHeadDog is here to help.

How to Get Free Excedrin at CVS

Little. Yellow. Free.

Nuprin is pretty scarce around these days but here’s a printable coupon for $2off select Excedrin pain relief. This week at CVS, the 24 count are on sale for $1.99. Hand over the $2off coupon and the kind associate will “adjust the coupon down” to $1.99.  That’s the easiest free product you’ll ever pick up.

Link to printable coupon–it’s a “Bricks” coupon so you’ll have to install the coupon printer:
http://www.excedrin.com/index.shtml

Link to snail mail coupon to be sent (my choice so you don’t have to install the printer software):
http://bricks.coupons.com/help/InstallGuide.asp?tqnm=qdjmblh21673751&bt=wg&o=54125&c=EX&p=TjoBqapO

Note: If you choose to have the coupon sent, it probably won’t arrive until next week–after the sale is over. Not to worry, these $1.99 sales come up often at Walgreens and CVS, so hold onto it. The coupon is valid until June (specific date is dependent on when you print it).

Free toothpaste this week at CVS

Get your Extra Care card out and head to CVS for your free Crest Pro-Health Enamel Care toothpaste. Here’s the deal:

Crest Pro-Health Enamel Care
FREE
…$3.49, get $3.49 ECB,
Limit 1

To make it a money maker, use a coupon! Use a $.50 off Crest Toothpaste coupon found in last  week’s Proctor & Gamble coupon circular from the Sunday newspaper.

Time to Get Creative This Week

So, there’s no free-after-Extra-Bucks deals this week March 8-14, but the FatHeadDog says ‘No Worries.’ Some deals that are catching my eye this week:

  • Crest Pro-Health 4.2 oz. or Rinse 250ml $2.99, Get $2 ECBs LIMIT 1
  • Coke 12 pk., Selected Varieties 4/$13, Get $3 ECBs LIMIT 1
  • Garnier/Maybelline Spend $10, Get $5 ECBs, LIMIT 2
  • Physicians Formula Organic Wear Powder or Bronzer ($14.99), Get $10 ECB Limit 1
  • General Mills Cereal 3/$10, Get $5 ECB Limit 1

Free This Week at CVS

This week’s CVS ad has three, generous free after Extra Bucks offers–free energy shots, mouthwash and powdered instant shakes. With free after Extra Buck offers, simply use your CVS Extra Care card to purchase the item (ideally with a coupon). On your receipt, Extra Bucks will print out for the price you paid. For example, pay $.99 for an item, get $.99 Extra Buck for your next purchase. Here’s how to maximize these offers:

Free After Extra Care Bucks

Act Total Care Trial Size (0.99) FAEB LIMIT 2
Found on endcap, trial size section or oral care aisle
The weekly ad circular says the limit is one, but according to Slickdeals.net, the limit is two.

Carnation Instant Breakfast $4.99 get $4.99 ECB Limit 1
Found near nutritional/weight loss aids on the bottom shelf!

Coupons: Carnation Instant Breakfast, $1 Blinkie – found at Kroger

Carnation Instant Breakfast, $0.75 Jan 23 Issue of All You Magazine Exp 3/31/09

Slimquick Energy Shot 2 pack $4.99 Get $4.99 ECB Limit 1
Found near nutritional/weight loss aids, next to bottled energy shots


Source: Slickdeals.net

As Seen on NBC5

In a series about ways to save money around the house, NBC5′s Meredith Land interviewed me about my annual savings at CVS with my Extra Care reward card. In one year’s time, I saved more than $4,000 on household toiletries by taking advantage of CVS’s Extra Bucks program, weekly sales and coupons.

Original air date: Friday, Feb. 13

Mom Saves Big Bucks Shopping Smart

How to Get Free Toothpaste at CVS

If you’re new to CVS’ing, here’s how to get free toothpaste at CVS with your Extra Care reward card:

This week (2/15-2/21), CVS is offering 4oz Colgate Total Advanced Toothpaste for $2.99. It gives $2.99 back in Extra Bucks. So that’s free right? Use a coupon and make it a moneymaker.

1. Buy one Colgate for $2.99.

2. Use a $.75off coupon if you have it from the newspaper. OR, do a Google search for $1.50 Aetna Colgate coupon and print one for yourself.

3. Pay approx. $1.50 or 2.25 (depending on your coupon) and get $2.99 back in Extra Bucks.

4. Then, “rinse and repeat” to use that $2.99 Extra Bucks to buy another tube (limit is 2 total).

5. Use another $1.50 coupon.

6. Pick up a pack of gum or something inexpensive (at least $1.50), because you won”t get change back on your $2.99 Extra Buck.

6. Total will be approx. $1.50 plus whatever you buy $1.50, and pay with your $2.99 Extra Buck. Your total will be next to nothing.

Conclusion: You’ve paid $1.50 out of pocket for 2 tubes of toothpaste and a pack of gum, and then you’ve got a $2.99 Extra Buck to use next time. Don’t forget about this valuable piece of paper though! It’ll expire in about a month.

Do’s and Don’ts of Discount Drugstore Shopping

by K. Shelby Skrhak

Do—

Pick one drugstore/grocery store and follow its weekly ad circulars. For example, I prefer to shop CVS. By picking just one store—instead of trying to track all the store’s sales and prices—I keep it simple and become familiar with that particular store’s frequent sales.

For example, CVS tends to put the following items on sale frequently. I use this information to collect coupons for the following items:

soyjoy 199x300 Do’s and Don’ts of Discount Drugstore Shopping

  • Crest and Colgate toothpaste
  • Soyjoy snack bars
  • Garnier shampoo/conditioner and styling products
  • Pantene shampoo/condition and styling products
  • Covergirl cosmetics
  • Maybelline cosmetics
  • Sally Hanson nail products
  • Dawn dish soap

Here’s an example of how to get Dawn dish soap free or almost free:

In the Proctor & Gamble coupon circular, which comes the first week of every month, look for the Dawn coupons. The amounts range from $.50 to $2.00, depending on the particular variety of Dawn. When CVS runs a sale of Dawn dish soap, they typically run one of two specials:

1. Dawn $.99

2. Dawn Buy One Get One

The first scenario is a great opportunity to use a $1off coupon. $1 off 99 cent equals free! But here’s a little known fact to employ for the second scenario. Many drugstores and grocery stores accept coupons for both items on a buy one  get one (BOGO) sale. So, in this case, use two $1 off coupons. $1+$1 off $1.99 equals free!

Don’t—

Don’t “do” every deal just because it’s on sale. When I first started out, I clipped dozens and dozens of coupons every week for just about any product because I never knew if there’d be a sale on it. But soon, all these coupons accumulated and became burdensome to organize and carry. I’d waste time simply flipping through all these coupons in the store, and soon drugstore shopping became a lengthier process than I wanted or intended. Soon I learned to pick and choose.

For example, I could buy 2 Sure Deodorant for $2.79 each, use a buy one get one coupon on it, and get back $3 in CVS Extra Bucks—a deal in which I’ve kinda “made money,” but I don’t use that brand and therefore it’s not a good deal for me. Instead, just select the products you use, or would like to use. That’s the bonus of discount drugstore shopping: you get to try brand new products or name brands you always thought were too expensive otherwise.