A few years ago, I hit a major wall financially. I needed to buy a gift for someone special, but my mortgage was due, groceries were tight, and I had absolutely no wiggle room at all. So I decided it was time I stopped spending, almost completely.
It wasn’t easy, but it taught me how to survive on almost nothing and build a system that I still use when money gets tight
Here’s exactly what I did to go $0-spend for 30 days — and what you can copy if you’re in survival mode too.
Why I Did This (And Why It Might Be Right for You)
I didn’t do a no-spend month as a challenge. I did it because I had no other choice. When I realized I had no money to buy my loved one a small gift, it was like the final reality check I needed to make a change. And my change needed to be BIG.
But what started out of desperation actually became the foundation of how I manage my money now. It has helped me save money I didn’t even know I had, because I was mindlessly spending it!

The Rules of My $0 Spending System
✅ Allowed Spending:
- Rent/mortgage
- Utilities
- Essential groceries (strictly staples)
- Gas or transport for work
- Medications or emergency needs
❌ Not Allowed:
- Takeout
- Coffee shops
- Online shopping (even Amazon “essentials”)
- Hobbies, decor, upgrades
- Subscriptions or app purchases
- Social spending
GOAL: Spend nothing beyond bare-minimum survival for 30 days.

STEP 1: Inventory Everything You Already Own
Before buying anything, I looked at:
- Pantry: rice, pasta, canned goods
- Freezer: frozen veggies, bread, proteins
- Toiletries: soap, shampoo, floss, razors
- Cleaning: vinegar, baking soda, rags
Tip: Make a full “Use It Up” list and stick it on your fridge so you can reference it easily
This alone saved me over $100 in the first week — I had so much I forgot I owned that probably would have gone stale in my pantry.
STEP 2: Create a Survival Meal Plan
I rotated 4–5 cheap meals using ingredients I already had. My basics:
- Rice + beans with frozen veg
- Pasta + canned tomato sauce
- Egg fried rice
- Oatmeal with peanut butter
- Toasted sandwiches + soup
I limited grocery spending to $25–$30/week max – and I utilized the Dollar Tree to help me (Check out my dollar tree grocery plan here for inspo!)
STEP 3: Shift Focus to What You Can Control
When you can’t spend, you can still:
- Declutter (and SELL what you don’t need!)
- Clean
- Cook delicious meals
- Rest
- Create – something we don’t do enough
I made a “Zero-Spend Activity List” that I used every time I got the urge to shop or scroll.
→ [Download mine here — Free Printable PDF]
STEP 4: Handle Temptations + Emotional Spending
What worked for me:
- I deleted Amazon + Etsy apps completely off of my phone
- I unsubscribed from all promo shopping emails
- I made a “wish list” instead of buying things immediately
- I wrote down in a notes app what triggered the urge to spend
This helped me understand why I was spending, not just how much. You’d be surprised what can make you spend when you just don’t need something.

STEP 5: Track Every Non-Spend Win
I kept a calendar sheet on my fridge and marked down:
- Every day I spent $0
- Every grocery swap I made
- Every time I almost bought something but didn’t
It sounds small — but it builds momentum. At the end of 30 days, I saved over $700 just by freezing all non-essential spending.
What I Learned From Not Spending
– You can live on way less than you think.
– Most purchases are habits, not needs
– Simplicity is grounding
– $0 months aren’t forever — but they change you forever
Want to Try It?
I made a free printable kit to help you do the same:
$0 Spending Tracker
- Use-What-You-Have Inventory Sheet
- Zero-Spend Boredom List
- Emotional Spending Journal Page
👉 Download The $0 Spending System Toolkit – Free [COMING SOON!]
Or get the full Frugal Reset Bundle with the printable tracker, meal plan, and challenge calendar for only $3 [COMING SOON!]
You Have The Power To Save
You don’t have to feel ashamed when money is tight. You just need a plan. This system got me through my lowest point — and now, it’s a fallback I’ll always keep in my back pocket.
Try it for a week. Then a month. Then keep what works. You’ve got more control than you think.
Most of all, remember to enjoy life as it’s happening right now – that’s free 🙂
Until next time,
Jenn