Convenience is the only product everyone buys daily and nobody sees on a receipt. So for one week, I made it visible. Every time I paid extra for speed, delivery, or not-having-to, I wrote down the premium. Just the difference, not the whole price.
The week’s convenience total: $67. Multiply by 52 and that’s roughly $3,500 a year, mostly invisible. Here’s the diary, and what I decided was actually worth it.
Monday: delivery fees and their friends, $11
Dinner delivered. The food cost what the food costs, but the app added a delivery fee, a service fee, and the polite pressure of a tip for a twelve minute drive. Pickup would have saved $11 on the identical meal. I wrote it down and ate my slightly cold noodles thoughtfully.
Tuesday: the pre-cut tax, $6
Grocery run. Pre-cut fruit, shredded cheese, and a bagged salad kit versus their whole equivalents came to about $6 of premium for maybe nine minutes of knife work. Some days that trade is fine. The interesting part was realizing I’d never once done the math before.
Wednesday: shipping impatience, $9
Needed a cable. The standard free shipping said five days. Express said tomorrow, $9. I paid it, and here’s the punchline: the cable sat unopened until Saturday. I paid $9 for a speed I didn’t use. This one stung because it revealed the pattern. I default to fast even when nothing needs fast.
Thursday: the car wash spectrum, $8
The premium wash versus the basic plus two minutes of my own vacuuming. I took the premium out of pure habit. Habit is where convenience premiums live and breed.
Friday: coffee run logistics, $14
Two coffee shop visits during errands, not because the coffee is better than mine, but because leaving the house without a plan makes purchased solutions appear. $14 of premium over home brewing, and I genuinely like my home coffee more. The 60 day tracking experiment already taught me this lesson once. Apparently it needed a rerun.
The weekend: batch of small ones, $19
Parking close instead of two blocks away. The airport-style water bottle at the event instead of the one in my bag, which was in the car, which was parked close, which I also paid for. A convenience fee for paying a bill by card instead of the bank transfer I always forget to set up. Little stuff, all of it optional, none of it noticed at the time.
The verdict: what stayed, what went
I’m not anti-convenience. I’m anti-invisible. So each line got sorted with one question: what am I actually buying here, and would I buy it on purpose?
Kept: the occasional delivery on genuinely exhausted nights, because $11 to protect a hard evening is real value. Bagged salad, honestly, because the alternative in our house was salad not happening.
Cut: express shipping (a default switched to “only when truly needed”), the premium car wash habit, and errand-coffee, replaced by the thermos that was always sitting right there.
The changes claw back maybe $40 of the weekly $67 without making life worse. That’s about $2,000 a year, recovered not by discipline but by a week of writing things down. Convenience is worth paying for. It’s just worth knowing you’re paying.