Category: Finances | Read time: 6 min | By Fred
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Let me guess. You've looked at your monthly bills, felt vaguely annoyed, and then done absolutely nothing about it.
Because what are you going to do — call them?
Spend 45 minutes on hold listening to smooth jazz while a robot asks you to "please hold for the next available representative"?
Yeah. That's what they're counting on.
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Here's the thing most of these companies quietly know: the people who call are the people who save money.
The people who don't call just keep paying whatever number was on the welcome letter three years ago.
I called. And in one afternoon — spread across maybe 40 minutes total — I knocked nearly $180 off my monthly bills.
Not by switching anything. Not by downgrading anything. Just by calling and asking.
Here are the five bills worth your 10 minutes.
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1. Your Internet Bill
This one almost always works. Internet providers are obsessed with new customers.
They'll offer a brand-new subscriber half-price internet and a free streaming service just to get them in the door.
Meanwhile, you — the loyal customer who has paid on time every single month for six years — are paying full price.
Sometimes more than full price, because your promotional rate expired two years ago and nobody told you.
The fix: Call the customer retention number (not the main line — Google "*your provider* + retention department").
Tell them you've been a customer for X years and you've been offered a better rate by a competitor.
You don't even have to have the competitor offer in hand. They will either reduce your bill, give you a credit, or offer you a new promotional rate on the spot.
I did this last spring. Saved $34 a month. Took nine minutes.
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## 2. Your Car Insurance
Most people get car insurance, set up autopay, and never look at it again. T
hat's great for the insurance company. Less great for you.
Insurance companies gradually raise rates over time — sometimes because of general market trends, sometimes because they just... can.
And unlike your car registration, they're not required to send you a strongly-worded reminder that it's happening.
The fix: Call your current insurer and ask them to re-quote your policy from scratch. Tell them you want to make sure you're getting the best rate available.
Also ask whether any discounts have been added to the market since you signed up — many insurers now offer discounts for low mileage, good driving records, bundling, or even paying annually instead of monthly.
If they can't sharpen the pencil, get a quote from one competitor. Even if you don't switch, going back to your insurer with a competing quote works wonders.
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## 3. Your Cell Phone Plan
The cell phone industry changes fast. The plan you signed up for in 2021 may be genuinely worse — and more expensive — than what the same carrier is offering new customers right now.
And here's the kicker: they won't automatically move you to a better plan. That would cost them money. You have to ask.
The fix: Log into your carrier's app or website and look at the current plan lineup.
Or just call and say, "I want to make sure I'm on the best plan for how I actually use my phone."
Show them your last three months of data usage.
More often than not, you're paying for data you're not using, or you're a tier below a plan that would actually save you money with a bundle.
I dropped $22 a month just by moving to a plan that matched my actual usage. Phone companies are not in the business of volunteering that information.
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## 4. Subscriptions You've Forgotten About
This one isn't a negotiation — it's a treasure hunt. A depressing one.
The average American household spends over $200 a month on subscription services.
Do you know what you're subscribed to right now? Off the top of your head?
I didn't. And when I actually checked my bank statement — really checked it, line by line — I found a meditation app I hadn't opened since 2022, a "free trial" that had quietly become $14.99 a month, and a cloud storage service I'd signed up for when I got a new phone and completely forgotten about.
The fix: Pull up your last two months of bank and credit card statements.
Highlight every recurring charge.
Ask yourself: did I use this in the last 30 days? I
f the answer is no, cancel it. Most take less than two minutes to cancel online.
Some will offer you a discounted rate to stay — take it if it's a service you actually use.
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## 5. Your Home or Renters Insurance
Same story as car insurance, different envelope.
Home insurance rates creep up quietly, bundling discounts get missed, and many people are carrying more coverage — or the wrong kind of coverage — than they need.
The fix: Call your insurer and ask for a full review of your policy.
Specifically ask: Are there any discounts I'm not currently receiving?
Am I over-insured anywhere?
Would bundling with my auto insurance save me money?
This call tends to take the longest — maybe 20 minutes — but it's often the biggest payoff.
One reader emailed me to say she saved $38 a month just from bundling her home and auto with the same company.
She'd had them separate for 11 years.
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The Only Rule
Don't overthink it. You're not negotiating a hostage situation — you're just having a conversation. The worst they can say is no.
The best they can say will put real money back in your pocket every single month.
Start with the internet bill. It's the easiest win and the fastest call. Once you've done it once, the others feel easy.
Ten minutes. Maybe a hundred bucks a month. That's $1,200 a year.
Worth picking up the phone.
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