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Big budget month day ten: how to eat out for less

Anna Powell
by Lovemoney Staff Anna Powell on 10 March 2012  |  Comments 19 comments

Here's how to get discounts from top restaurants and cut the cost of eating out.

Big budget month day ten: how to eat out for less

Thanks to recent events in the economy, eating out is a luxury that could go by the wayside for many.

But if you still want to treat yourself, here are some top tips on how to minimise spending – and maximise enjoyment – from McDonald's to Michelin star.

Discount vouchers

Various chain restaurants - such as Pizza Express, Zizzi, Ask and Gourmet Burger Kitchen - have special offers on pretty much constantly, hoping to attract customers feeling the pinch. You can find out all about the latest offers and discount vouchers in our Frugal Food blog which is published every Friday.

There are often discount vouchers for the likes of McDonald's and the coffee chains inside daily newspapers. When we spot them, we highlight them on our Facebook page.

Newspapers such as the Times and the Telegraph, and many local newspapers, also run discount meal promotions at various times of the year where you collect tokens from the paper - again, keep an eye on our Facebook page for the latest.

One point to remember is the precise details of the offer. Sometimes the discount will be on a set menu, sometimes on the a la carte, or it might be a different offer all together. Make sure you remember the details, and the voucher, before you order!

Discount websites

There are some terrific deals out there for diners prepared to do a little research. There are several discount websites with eating out offers including restaurant specialist Toptable, 5pm and lastminute. Typical offers include 50% off the a la carte menu, a set menu for £15 or less, or discounts on drinks. If you sign up to Toptable, you also earn reward points for every booking you make, which you can redeem for free meals, chef masterclasses or gifts.

If you live in London, take a look at London Eating, if you live in Dorset there's Your Meal Ticket and if you live in Edinburgh try EdinburghMenus, which collates the offers from the discount sites in one place. If you know of any others, please share them in the Comments section at the bottom of the page.

Remember that you need to mention an offer when you book a table if you're doing it over the phone. Then I usually mention the offer to the maitre d’ when I arrive, as a reminder. I’ve never had any trouble with the bill, or been treated any differently from a normal customer.

Daily deals websites

There's a growing number of these websites, also known as 'group-buying' websites, and most of them have restaurant deals offering potentially big savings on meals. If you want to see deals from several of the sites in one place, sign up to Buyometric or AllDeals, which aggregate the latest offers from the likes of Groupon, kgbdeals, livingsocial and wowcher based on your preferences and location.

Just make sure the deal is really value for money and that you read the terms and conditions of how you redeem it carefully before you spend your money.

Discount membership clubs

If you eat out a lot, there are a few memberships clubs worth considering. There's the Gourmet Society, where for an annual membership of £69.95 you can get two-for-one meals or 25% off the bill at over 5,000 restaurants around the UK.

Then there's tastecard, which has expanded from just tastelondon to offer 50% off at over 5,500 restaurants across the UK. What’s more, if you use this free membership link, you can sign up to a free one-month trial so you can try before you buy. Full annual membership costs £79.95.

Meanwhile, the Hi-Life Diners Club offers two-for-one meals at over 3,500 restaurants in the UK and Ireland. It costs £49.95 a year.

The Gastro Card costs £30 but doesn't have anywhere near the same number of places on its books. However, if you live in the West Midlands it might be worth a look as that's where its greatest concentration of restaurants are located.

With all the membership clubs, make sure you've checked any restrictions on using your discount card, such as it not being valid on weekends, before you arrive at the restaurant.

Look for discount menus

Even some of the most famous and awarded restaurants in the land offer discounts, particularly during January, which is the quietest time of the year. Take a look at their websites and you might be surprised, particularly if you're happy to go for a lunch sitting.

Don’t be afraid to haggle

If you’re booking for a group, sometimes restaurants will haggle for your custom. This obviously isn’t going to work for dinner a deux at Gordon Ramsay, but if there is a number of you planning to eat and obvious competitors nearby, it can be worth asking for a quiet word with the manager first. You might be able to arrange a free round of drinks or a discount off the bill.

The Bengali restaurants on Brick Lane in London, where I live, are particularly keen hagglers. A quick-fire negotiation for free poppadoms or beer (admittedly usually Carling, rather than Cobra) is all part of the Brick Lane experience!

Saving more money in the restaurant

A painless, guilt-free way to cut costs is to order tap water, rather than expensive mineral water. Anyone who still thinks this is penny-pinching is behind the times. Tap water is way more environmentally sound than bottled water, which has often travelled hundreds of miles to get to your restaurant table.

And if you can stay away from alcohol, that’s even better. Restaurant economics dictates that most profit is made on alcohol, rather than food. The typical mark-up of a bottle of wine in a restaurant is 100% above the retail price – double what you’d pay in a supermarket. Cheaper wines are usually marked up more than pricier bottles, incidentally. If wine is a must, drink by the glass, or check out this list of ‘bring your own’ places – some of which are quite upmarket.

While cutting the tip might seem like a good way to cut costs, it’s a false economy if you’re planning to go back. Plus, it’s unfair not just on the waiters, but on the rest of the kitchen staff, since your tip usually goes towards their work as well. Of course, if the service is genuinely poor, then you shouldn’t feel guilty about not tipping.

Budget brilliance

Finally, how to find good, cheap restaurants? Try Chowhound (and check out chef Anthony Bourdain’s cheeky tip on how to make the best of restaurant forums) for unbiased reviews.

In London, there’s always Time Out’s Cheap Eats. And finally, see restaurant critic Charles Campion’s favourite places in the UK to eat out for under £10 – proof that even gourmets know how to find a tasty bargain.

This is a classic lovemoney article that has been updated

Big budget month so far:
Big budget month day one: how to plan a budget
Big budget month day two: looking at your spending

Big budget month day three: setting your goals
Big budget month day four: make sure you're not missing out on money
Big budget month day five: cut your transport costs

Big budget month day six: save money on food
Big budget month day seven: save money on your energy

Big budget month day eight: cut your utilities spending

Big budget month day nine: have a posh packed lunch on a budget!

 

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Comments (19)

  • drsquash
    Love rating 0
    drsquash said

    I agree about the tap water instead of mineral water or bottled water.Another way of saving money on eating out could be avoid buying bottled beers.

    Dr Squash

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • JamesLow
    Love rating 0
    JamesLow said

    As a driver and do not wish to drink, It would depend on where I was, due to the quality of water or lack of in some districts whether I ordered tap water.
    I always felt that a good restaurant should place a jug of water on the table as part of the service.
    JL

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • uglyandy
    Love rating 0
    uglyandy said

    Another Money saving scheme operating is the "Spree Book" which has many 2 for one deals or similar.

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • sirk84
    Love rating 0
    sirk84 said

    I either read somewhere or heard on some cookery programme that its a good idea to order the house wine when eating out. Reason for this is a restaurant won't let itself down by having a "bad" house wine. Not sure if its a myth or not but it has worked for me so far.

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • subaruchick
    Love rating 1
    subaruchick said

    Very interesting article, but what about the millions of us who don't live in London!

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • kitkat25
    Love rating 0
    kitkat25 said

    Another great website (especially for those outwith London!) is www.5pm.co.uk which offers discounts on A la carte menu's, pre-theatre and has many other fantastic offers. I try to use it every time I go out for dinner as the savings on food quite often cover the cost of a bottle of wine!!

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • annette02
    Love rating 0
    annette02 said

    Many people do not realise that if you have a cookery training school at your local college you can book to eat in the restaurant a 3 course meal for £6 and a 3 course evening meal for about £12 and any tips normally get collected for a students meal out at xmas time.The meals are well worth trying.

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • colin106
    Love rating 0
    colin106 said

    Great, well researched article by Anna Powell. However - just one caveat. We should beware drinking tap water. In many areas - certainly London - water is extracted from the Thames and then "purified" before being sent down the pipes to our taps, However, upstream of London, at least two towns, Reading included, legally discharge their treated sewage into the Thames. Unfortunately, this treated water contains small amounts of contraceptive chemicals, HRT, and traces from human urine of all the tranquillising drugs and sleeping pills and many others which so many people take nowadays. Neither the sewage treatment nor the water companies' "purifying" process, nor household filters can eliminate these substances, which may just be responsible for or contribute to, for example, the lowered sperm counts in many men. The only way to be safe would be to distill tapwater, but that is not an option for most of us. Yes, the transport of bottled water is wasteful, but if you choose a proper mineral water at least you should have the benefit of water which is free of the above harmful substances.

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Pannett
    Love rating 0
    Pannett said

    Another weird tip - I've found that if you look at how much a restaurant charges for bottled mineral water and multiply that by 10, the result is usually abut what a dinner for 2 will come to. Don't know why, but it works more often than not.

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • H8WTB
    Love rating 0
    H8WTB said

    I have never understood the tipping thing why should I tip somebody because their boss will not pay them enough??? Is that not why the government brought in the minimum wage?? Also do these people pay tax on the tip, probably not!

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • costafiver
    Love rating 0
    costafiver said

    Just looked up Toptable. They say they are all around England, yet there are none in Dorset. Maybe they do not classify Dorset being in England.

    Report on 12 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • integradc5
    Love rating 0
    integradc5 said

    Toptable is pretty London-centric in my experience, plus their site is hideous. There's a new one started in Nottingham called www.godine.co.uk, but as yet it really is only Nottingham.

    Hopefully it'll take off around the country as the site is nicer to use and apparently the restaurants control their own offers, so you should see more on there.

    Report on 13 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • annief41
    Love rating 0
    annief41 said

    I took advantage of the Strada 2-for-1 offer last night & the restaurant was packed by about 7.30pm... on a Tuesday... they were having to turn people away.
    As the deadline looms (23 October) it may be an idea to book a table if you want to enjoy this offer!

    Report on 15 October 2008  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Ken1961
    Love rating 22
    Ken1961 said

    London centric recycled article from 18 months ago, are we finding it difficult to find new material?

    Report on 16 March 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Donna Ferguson
    Love rating 130
    Donna Ferguson said

    Hi Ken, This was one of our classic articles that was very popular with our readers and as many new readers have joined since it was originally published, we thought it might be useful to highlight it again. We do clearly state in the article: This article was first published in October 2008 and has since been updated. You can find lots of useful information in our archives.

    I take your point about it being London-centric and we do try to avoid this generally.

    All the best

    Donna

    Report on 16 March 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • pablo411
    Love rating 9
    pablo411 said

    As others have said you are focused on The magnificence of London, most of us do not live or often do not wish to visit this "wonderful" capital city. you need to get out more give us yokels articles about the sticks, that is where most of your readers are we also need deals (we are not on London wages)

    Report on 17 March 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Donna Ferguson
    Love rating 130
    Donna Ferguson said

    Hi Pablo - do you have any tips of your own? If everyone added some local tips then everyone would benefit :)

    Donna

    Report on 17 March 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • SarahPerkins
    Love rating 0
    SarahPerkins said

    If you are in Dorset or Hampshire, great site for vouchers off local restaurants www.yourmealticket.co.uk

    Report on 31 August 2010  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • easygoing
    Love rating 157
    easygoing said

    Hi Donna, I would like to show my appreciation of how you respond to people who leave sarcastic and rude comments about articles on here. You courtesy is to be admired and perhaps it will rub off on the rest of us.

    Report on 10 March 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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