4 Ways Falling Energy Prices in 2025 Could Boost Your Savings

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Costs of living have been so steadily on the rise for the past few years, it’s almost difficult to believe that some prices are finally starting to fall. Yet energy prices, in particular, are finally starting to come down. People are noticing cheaper prices at the gas pump, and it won’t be long before they also see this cost savings in their utility bills. Furthermore, when energy prices come down, so do associated prices of goods and services that are tangentially related as well.

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While “bootstrapping and cutting back” are one way to save extra money, Chantel Bonneau-Stewart, a wealth management advisor with Northwestern Mutual, said that energy prices going down, which impacts everyone, is a great opportunity to take advantage of extra money in your bank account to boost your savings.

She discussed four ways falling energy prices could increase your savings in 2025.

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Most people have the savings goal of getting on track for retirement, Bonneau-Stewart said.

“Most individuals dream of a day where they don’t have to work quite as hard as they’re working right now.”

A reduction in your energy costs by even as little as 1% to 2% could be captured toward long-term retirement needs before you have the opportunity to spend it, she said.

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Another place to put those extra savings could be a college account for your children, she said.

“If you’re contributing $50 or $100 a month now, you can just go in and change that automatic contribution to double or to an extra $50 or whatever that new delta is so that you don’t skip a beat on that momentum.”

On the other side of the savings coin is paying down high-interest debt, such as credit card debt, Bonneau-Stewart said.

“So even though it doesn’t feel as exciting as accumulating more assets, the same idea of setting up an auto pay of an extra $100 a month toward one of your highest interest bearing pieces of debt can help you pay that down faster because then you’re eating away at principal.”

Debt that is accumulating high interest can hold you back from longer term savings objectives, she said.

If putting cash money away isn’t as urgent for you, these savings can be put toward something more “tangible,” Bonneau-Stewart said, such as home improvement projects.

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