Field guide

The low-buy year:
restraint you can keep.

A no-spend month is a detox. A low-buy year is a diet you can actually live on: you keep buying things — fewer, slower, on purpose. It's less dramatic, which is exactly why it works. Nobody's personality changes in 30 days. Twelve months is long enough to replace the autopilot.

The structure

Surviving month three

Month one runs on novelty, month two on momentum. Month three is where low-buys die — the rules feel normal, so breaking them feels small. The fix is visible progress: a running total of what the restraint has banked, pointed at a goal you can picture. "I didn't buy a jacket" is nothing. "£740 towards Lisbon" is a reason.

What counts as winning

Not perfection. A low-buy year with nine compliant months and three wobbles still rewires your defaults and banks most of the money. Count the year in days you didn't leak, not the days you did — the same day-counting logic as the no-spend challenge, stretched to a timescale that changes people.

Twelve months is a long time to referee alone. really? is a free Chrome extension that interrupts any checkout with a countdown, makes you type why you’re buying, and keeps score of every purchase you walked away from — measured against the thing you actually want. See it judge a checkout live or install it free.


More field guides: the no-spend challenge · How to Actually Hit a Savings Goal · Subscription Creep · all 26 guides