2 in a drawer.
Hiding money under the mattress.
In a watertight plastic bottle or jar in the tank on the back of your toilet 3.
Hiding cash in your mattress isn t a good idea as it could get lost or stolen.
Real adults who make smart choices keep their money in the bank.
Usually a reference to stashing money under the mattress or in a shoebox is a joke.
The average amount of money kept at home is 110 with some 77 per cent still proactively stashing notes or coins in their abode.
Grandma stuffing money under the mattress isn t the only one living outside the banking system.
Money in the bank earns interest also commonly referred to as compound interest.
The practice is really really dumb.
For one i usually had hundreds of dollars hidden in my room just begging to be stolen.
Money under the mattress just sits there.
In a plastic baggie in the freezer 5.
In an envelope at the bottom of your child s toybox 4.
You wouldn t believe how many bandaids we go through if i don t hide them.
Another 9 percent keep their cash.
Second all that money in my room wasn t doing anything for me.
Twenty places to hide money at home besides under your mattress 1.
Or at least they should.
The banking system is solid and trustworthy.
Paper money is also in great demand.
A new survey of more.
In an envelope taped to the bottom of a kitchen shelf 2.
As many as 28 million people in the united states are forgoing traditional financial institutions.
Toilet paper is not the only paper product that americans are stockpiling.
It s safer to keep your money in your bank account.
Don t store money or valuables there.
Of this 41 per cent keep their loose change in a jar and 10 per.
I believe that hiding money under the mattress is prevalent in pop culture due to great depression era bank runs creating a need for cash storage in the home.
I hide items from my kids in drawers in a locked closet even.