Questions to Ask About Gift Cards

We’ve recently explored whether gift cards denote laziness. If you do buy a gift card, be careful. We’ve been trained to think that gift cards are as good as cash in the store that offers them. Now that we’ve been trained, the stores like to throw curveballs, catching us off guard. Here are some questions to ask before you purchase any gift card:

1. Where can it be used? Some are are only valid in one store and some are not usable online. Check the rules.

2. When does it expire? Stores love having expiration dates on gift cards. How else can they get people to pay money and not have to lose any product? Sometimes the amount available decreases by a few percentage points each year. That’s something to look out for as well.

3. Are there shipping and handling fees? If you buy gift cards online, it is likely you’ll be hit with a shipping fee.

4. Is there a service fee? This is another way stores can charge fees regardless of shipping. There is no reason other than the fact that they can get away with it.

The article lists several additional basic questions for which you should know the answers before you spend money on a gift card.

Scroll down to leave a comment on “Questions to Ask About Gift Cards.”

Add to: Facebook | Delicious | Reddit | Digg
Get the RSS feed or enter your email address:


Related Entries on Consumerism Commentary

Comments are closed.

Welcome to Consumerism Commentary

Consumerism Commentary is a blog for men and women who wish to make the most of their financial lives. Read more about Consumerism Commentary.


TradeKing.com
Cash Loans
SmartyPig. The Social Side of Savings

Advertise on Consumerism Commentary

Credit Card Offers

FNBO Direct

Recent Comments

Best of Consumerism Commentary

Recent Articles

Popular on pfblogs.org

Subscribe via E-mail

TradeKing.com

Contributors

Disclaimer

The authors of Consumerism Commentary are not professional financial advisers and no text within this website should be considered financial advice. Any individual who makes financial decisions based solely on the information contained within does so at his or her own risk. Always consult a financial professional.

About Advertising

This website contains advertisements, usually listed as “sponsors.” Some links are for products or services for which Consumerism Commentary is an "affiliate." No articles within the blog are advertisements disguised as blog entries. Consumerism Commentary is not compensated for any content, except for advertising sold. This site contains no Pay-Per-Post (or similar) articles.

Privacy Policy

Carnival of Personal Finance