Costco Membership Dues - a rip off?
Got my automatic renewal - $180/year. We have a business membership and also pay for my adult (36 years old) stepdaughter (sigh). I've been noticing that Target is comparable and sometimes cheaper. I buy meat for my dog (cook for the dog) but can get a better deal with grocery store sales. It used to be that we got a certain percentage back with the AMEX card, but now we have a VISA that also pays a certain percentage back. So, I'm not sure that I save $180/year. Plus, it's a PIA to go with crowds in & out of the store.
So, I'm considering dumping this. But my friends are aghast that I would even consider NOT going to Costco. Am I a freak? Has anybody else dumped their membership - or never even taken one out? (The step daughter will stomp her foot - hope she doesn't chip an expensive pedicured nail - oh - was that out loud? :eek:)
Costco Membership Dues - a rip off?
Whoa, $180? What membership is that? Are you buying your kids cards too? I have the executive which is $150 a years and I get that amount or close to it in a coupon once a year, you dont have to tie it to a card. My adult son pays me back for his card. You can certainly downgrade your membership to the lowest level if you want to maintain it.
It's just the two of us. I am picky about what I buy but I also have a pantry and a chest freezer for storage. I buy a lot of the 8-packs of canned goods, coffee beans, pastas for the freezer, certain snacks like raw almonds (keep the bulk in the freezer) and Lara bars. The meat is very good so I portion it and freeze it. And gas? Always 10 cents a gallon less than anywhere else. It helps that Costco is only 10 minutes away from my house. I can go at 7 PM when it's empty. The selection of affordable organics is improving all the time. Also, if you don't have prescription coverage, the pharmacy is great.
You just have to do the math on what you buy and how you use or store it. I am not an impulse shopper at all, so it's pretty rare that I purchase anything that is not on my grocery list. My rule is, "if its not there next time, you probably don't need it" and I've only been burned once. I don't buy tires, or office supplies. I routinely get out of there for less than $100.
I shop at Costco extensively for our camping, ski and raft trips.
As a side note, Costco pays real living wages and makes health insurance and other benefits available to al employes. They support a lot of regional and artist entrepreneurs, and both those things are something you'll never find at other discounters.
Bottom line, it's not a rip off if you are using it an feel like you are getting good value out of it.
Re: Costco Membership Dues - a rip off?
I've thought about a Costco membership fairly often in the last couple of years. I've heard good things about thier meats & organic foods. As a single woman it is hard to justify the fee, and I don't have a separate freezer. I get what I need at Trader Joes, a local butcher with decent prices (and I know where thier farm is), Marsh & Whole Foods on occasion.
I get a lot of value for my modest budget, so I doubt I am missing anything. Part of me would still like to try it but it is just hard to justify.