Feb. 19: Saving Trends and Ideas
February 19, 2026

Saving trends, strategies and other ideas as we sail into 2026
In this resolution-focused time of a new year, saving more is tops on the list for many of us.
But how do we eke out savings from our already-tight, post-holiday budgets? Save with SPP decided to take a look around to see how people are planning their saving strategies for 2026, focusing on new trends and ideas.
At MoneySense, there’s agreement that saving is difficult “with budgets tight and inflation driving the cost of groceries and everyday necessities higher.”
But the article suggests that making “small monthly changes can add up over the year.”
Certified financial planner Kelly Ho tells the publication that few people have a good handle on how much they make, and how much they spend. “It’s just a matter of really understanding how much money is coming in and how much is going out,” she tells MoneySense.
Once you have that nailed down, you can increase what’s left after the bills are paid through mini-cuts to your budget. Have a good look, Ho suggests, at what you are paying out in subscriptions for TV shows, music, and other services.
These invisible little costs — $10 here, $15 there – can add up to a hefty burden on the credit card, the article explains. If you cut a service – even just $10 a month – the savings can add up. “You multiply that by 12 months, multiply that over several years, plus, you know, potential investment growth. That’s a lot of money on the table,” Ho tells the magazine.
Another good idea in the article is being “intentional” about what you spend when you are on vacation. “Every single individual I’ve spoken to has underestimated the cost of travel,” she tells MoneySense. “I don’t know if many people actually keep track of what they’re spending when they’re there at their destination.” So, don’t stop budgeting just because you’re on vacation – establish a budget and stay within it.
From This Is Money in the U.K. come three more ideas.
There’s the 100-envelope challenge. You get 100 envelopes, the article explains, and number them from one to 100.
“Each week, savers pick out two envelopes at random and put the amount shown on the front into them. In 50 weeks, they would have saved £5,050 (or in Canada, that much in dollars),” the article explains – an amount that could “turbocharge” your savings.
Other 2026 trends include “no spend” and “no buy” challenges, the article continues.
“As part of the no-spend challenge, people will go through strict periods of not purchasing anything beyond absolute necessities or use up all the products or food they already own before replacing them as a way to save money,” the article tells us.
“There is a ‘no buy’ thread on social media platform Reddit where revenge savers share the savings they have made from limiting their spending,” the article continues.
“Revenge saving?” Let’s read on.
“It involves carefully tracking how much you are saving, as with normal budgeting activities,” the article notes. “But revenge saving goes a step further by deliberately not spending and taking part in savings challenges to build up a pot of savings.”
So, a savings plan enhanced by conscious non-spending challenges. Wow.
The Dallas Express, via Yahoo! Life, offers up some more strategic saving thoughts.
There’s the classic, sound idea of “automating savings transfers,” the “setting up… of automatic moves from chequing to savings right after payday – even as little as $10 or $20 per paycheque – helps `pay yourself first’ without relying on willpower.”
What about cutting back on food delivery?
Chicago certified financial planner Valerie Rivera tells the Express “after housing and childcare, the third-largest expense I often see is food delivery… Think about what would happen if you redirected $50 every month that was going to takeout and put it in a savings account.”
Final ideas from the Express including shopping more often at thrift stores, reducing electrical costs by such measures as switching to LED bulbs, and building an emergency fund.
We can add two more that worked for us. We had a variable mortgage. When interest rates went down for our second five-year term, we kept paying what we had paid before at the higher interest rate. We didn’t feel any pain but were paying the mortgage off more quickly.
Another tip, which we picked up from doing this blog, was the idea of simply taking a set percentage of your take-home pay off the top of every paycheque and putting it into savings. We started small, at three per cent, and increased the amount when we could. Then you live on the 97 per cent. It has worked.
If you are saving for retirement via the Saskatchewan Pension Plan, the idea of paying your future self first can easily be arranged. SPP permits pre-authorized contributions from bank accounts or even credit cards.
That way, you are directing savings dollars in a “set it and forget it” way to SPP, who will then grow those savings by investing them in our low-cost, professionally managed pooled fund. At retirement, you can collect a lifetime monthly income via an SPP annuity, or opt for the more flexible Variable Benefit.
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Written by Martin Biefer

Martin Biefer is Senior Pension Writer at Avery & Kerr Communications in Nepean, Ontario. A veteran reporter, editor and pension communicator, he’s now a freelancer. Interests include golf, line dancing and classic rock, and playing guitar. Got a story idea? Let Martin know via LinkedIn.
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