I've spent 7 years living in a tiny home and a camper van. It's taught me how to be a smarter shopper and better saver.

By living in a tiny home and a camper van for years, I learned tips anyone could use for being a better consumer, saving money, and shopping smarter.

  • Years of living in a tiny house and van taught me to be far more intentional about what I buy.
  • Dramatically downsizing showed me the value of investing in quality, multipurpose items.
  • The lessons of tiny living can help anyone become a smarter, more mindful consumer.

When you're stuck living in 400 square feet, every purchase feels like it matters 400 times more.

By now, I've spent over seven years of my adult life living in either a tiny house or a camper van, two lifestyles that demand ruthless space efficiency.

There's no walk-in closet to hide impulse buys, no attic to store forgotten hobbies, and no junk drawer to absorb life's overflow. Every object in my space has to justify its presence.

Tiny living didn't just change how I organized my home; it reshaped how I shop, what I value, and even how I measure convenience and comfort.

In short, it made me a much smarter, more intentional consumer. Fortunately, many of the habits I've developed aren't just reserved for those of us living in tight spaces.

Whether you're in a mansion or a micro-studio apartment, consider working these lessons I learned about buying better, wasting less, and choosing more intentionally into your own life. They may just help you save money and de-stress.

If an item doesn't effectively earn its space, it doesn't come into my home

Interior of a van fillde with pantry items, storage containers

van

In a tiny home, there's no such thing as "just in case." Every jacket, gadget, and mug has to fight for its right to exist inside my space, which can feel especially tragic when you have a penchant for artisanal mugs as I do.

To override these often impulse-driven wants, I've learned to ask myself two questions before buying anything: Do I actually need this? And, if so, where will it live?

Shelving unit next to chair in tiny home

tiny home

Before I hit the virtual or real-life checkout, I automatically picture where an item would fit in my space. If it doesn't have a clear spot (or at least a non-negotiable purpose), I skip it.

This habit — along with the fact that I have very few stores within a 30-mile radius of my home — has curbed impulse shopping in every area of my life.

I prioritize buying items that can serve more than one purpose

Author Amber McDaniel posing at standing desk in kitchen of tiny home

My standing desk can also serve as an extra counter in my kitchen.

Tiny living has taught me to be a master of double-duty.

In the van, my camping stove worked as both a cooktop and a makeshift space heater, and my cutting boards slid over the sink to double as counter space.

Even now in my tiny house, I keep a single bottle of castile soap and white vinegar to cover all my cleaning needs. My washer-dryer combo serves quadruple duty, as it's also my hamper and a storage shelf.

I look for versatility in everything I purchase — even my desk is an adjustable standing one on wheels that can serve as a countertop extension for my kitchen on heavy meal-prep days.

Regardless of how much space I have, I'd rather invest in one workhorse product that does multiple jobs well than clutter my life with a dozen one-trick ponies, no matter how nifty TikTok makes them look.

When possible, I invest in higher-quality items and repair things I own instead of replacing them

Woman with head below van

I've made some on-the-fly fixes on my van while on the road.

Perhaps the biggest thing van life taught me is how to fix things on the fly. Because when you're 20 miles down a dirt road with a broken vehicle and no cell service, calling a mechanic simply isn't an option.

Though my current tiny house is rooted firmly on-grid, these are still lessons I've carried with me, because when you only own a handful of items, they get a lot of wear … even if they aren't regularly rattling down washboard roads.

I default to a repair-over-replacement mindset whenever possible: Holey socks get darned, busted seams get stitched, wobbly chairs get a dab of wood glue.

Learning to repair taught me patience, but it also showed me how much money can be saved when you give things a second life instead of defaulting to replacements.

And as I make new purchases, I try to invest in items that can be fixed or will likely not need to be replaced for quite some time.

I've learned (oftentimes the hard way) that it's worth saving up for higher-quality versions of products instead of cheap alternatives, like a solid-wood chair instead of a particle-board imitation or a well-made vintage coat instead of one that's not designed to last.

In time, I've learned that less really is enough

Author Amber McDaniel sitting in chair outside of van

I've learned how to enjoy the simple things.

At first, I missed having a neatly organized closet full of garments that didn't need to be triple-layered on hangers and a kitchen stocked with every gadget.

However, I eventually realized that with fewer options, I actually made decisions faster and felt less stressed. Rather than spending 20 minutes in the morning agonizing over what to wear, my small wardrobe feels like a curated collection of favorites.

For me, tiny living was less about chasing minimalist ideals and rather a product of circumstance and finances. I never set out to become a smarter consumer, but the unintentional lessons that came with the lifestyle stayed with me.

And even when I eventually (hopefully) upgrade to a bigger home, I know I'll bring the focus on quality, intention, and enough of the tiny-living mindset with me.

Sometimes it takes living small to see the bigger picture.

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