How couponing communities are still thriving

Retail Online Training


This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

Every week, Monique Geter follows her committed routine to tracking new deals. Sundays are for CVS and Walgreens while Wednesdays are for Harris Teeter and Food Lion. Swiping through Instagram, Facebook Groups, deal marketplace Flipp and an occasional newspaper, Geter spends hours deal-searching online to please her loyal followers who depend on her routine summarization of how to earn the lowest prices at popular discount retailers. 

Geter is a Gen Z, college graduate and small content creator part of the online couponing community. She runs an Instagram account (@momoneymosavings) posting her favorite weekly and daily deals she’s researched.

Monique isn’t the only one with a deal-hunting routine. Though print coupons may be mostly a thing of the past in a now digitally focused world, the search for saving money has transitioned online, giving rise to a digital couponing community. Content creators like Kiersti Tork (812K followers) and Mrs D Coupon Queen (74K followers) post consistent opportunities to save for their large followings.

Discount retailers like CVS, Dollar General, Family Dollar, Dollar Tree, Walgreens and others frequent influencers’ deal roundups. During a time of continued economic inflation, perhaps that makes sense. According to data from Numerator, Walgreens is the top promoter in the U.S. for consumer packaged goods (what consumers generally use coupons for), in all regions.

Retailers are catering to digital couponers by developing mobile apps dedicated to hosting coupons and notifying customers of deals. Discount retailers like Dollar General, Dollar Tree and Family Dollar update their mobile apps frequently with weekly and daily deals for shoppers. These deals help inform what influencers then share with their own communities on Instagram, TikTok, Facebook and more. 

In the internet era, online communities are helping each other find discounts at already cheap stores. Here’s a look at how they’re influencing shoppers’ minds, carts and why deal hunting is still relevant.

A brief history of extreme couponing and the extreme couponer in 2024

The digital coupon found on Instagram, TikTok or a retailer’s mobile app serves as the modern-day iteration of coupon clipping in newspapers, coupon stacking, dumpster diving and similar behaviors as expressed on shows like TLC’S Extreme Couponing. Though the show is dramatized for viewers and couponing has changed drastically since the 2010s, the mission to find the cheapest price remains. 

Best friends Heather Wheeler and Joanie Demer, co-CEOs of the Krazy Coupon Lady, were there for the conception of the popular reality show and extreme couponing as a behavior. 

Wheeler said she first heard of a, “crazy way that people were using coupons to get free stuff at the grocery store” online before social media really existed. 

“The internet was so different back then that it was hard to get information about it,” Wheeler said in an interview. “And I wasn’t sure if it was going to work. I wasn’t sure if the store was going to get mad at me, like, I didn’t know. So I convinced Joanie to come. I said, ‘I’ve done all the work, just come and try this with me and be there, you know, if I get kicked out of the store, we’ll have a funny story for the rest of our lives, right?’”

Demer reluctantly joined her best friend to see the deals go through, their plan working to everyone’s surprise and the store’s cashier, “as obsessed as we were with how much money we were able to save.”

Shortly thereafter, the two founded their blog, in 2009. First shared to family and friends, Wheeler and Demer featured the deals they were using and how to earn them. The blog quickly grew a following in just a few months, averaging over 1,000 daily visitors to the website in April, Wheeler said.  

KCL’s blog shares at least 100 deals daily. “Most importantly, we still have human shoppers — not robots or algorithms — writing every single one of our deals. Every coupon on our website has been hand-vetted, because no one wants to waste time with a bot that’s guessing random promo codes,” its website reads. 

“We didn’t have social channels,” Wheeler said. “It was just people finding us and finding value in what we were sharing. So at that point, we decided to get serious about it and really come up with a plan for the content on the site.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=/PwtV6r9aVVc

Though KCL began in a different era of couponing, now a lot of it is happening on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok and all over social media.

Couponing influencers post deals, alongside advice to help novice couponers. Tips and tricks for first-time couponers might include advice to “do your own math” before checking out, to price match with other stores for the cheapest option and a reminder that prices may vary by store location. Posts range from how to get a full basket of products for a certain price, rebates, weekly deals, freebies, buy one get one offers and more.

Geter got her start at couponing during the COVID-19 pandemic, a moment in history where money was tight, many pursued new hobbies and free was bountiful. She found relevant resources online through Instagram and private Facebook groups where she learned as much as she could from experts on how to coupon modernly and properly.

“I do think that couponing, it’s extremely easy,” Geter said. “But you definitely need to put in a little work to get the deals.”



Retail Online Training