Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

What To Do With Unwanted Gift Cards

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Dec, 2016 08:49 PM
    Gift cards are a popular present at the holidays — the National Retail Federation says more than half of consumers plan to give one this year.
     
    But they aren't always wanted — research organization CEB TowerGroup estimates that $1 billion of the $130 billion spent on gift cards last year went unused.
     
    It could be that the gift card is for a retailer or other business the recipient doesn't like. Or they simply don't have access to the restaurant or movie theatre to spend it.
     
    So if you got a gift card that is going to sit untouched, what should you do? Here are a few options:
     
     
    REGIFT IT
     
    This may be your easiest solution.
     
    If you can't use the card or just don't want it, someone else might. So why not hand it over to a loved one who wants it? Gift cards are typically good for several years and there are no rules about changing hands.
     
    SELL IT
     
    There are various exchanges online, such as Cardpool.com, Raise.com and Cardcash.com, where you can buy and sell gift cards. You won't get the full value of the card but you'll recoup some of the value.
     
    Expect to get about 80 to 90 cents on the dollar of the value of the card at a reputable site, said Teri Llach, chief marketing officer for the Blackhawk Network, which owns Cardpool.
     
     
    Llach strongly discourages consumers from going rogue and trying to sell or buy one for themselves online as there's no way to tell if you are being conned. An established and reputable site will guarantee that you are getting the promised balance in the time frame you want.
     
    If you are more of an in-person sort, you can visit a CoinStar Exchange kiosk to get cash for your gift cards. Target will allow you to bring in gift cards for major brands with remaining balances on them and exchange them for a Target gift card.
     
    You still won't get the full value, but it's a better deal than gathering dust.
     
    DONATE IT
     
     
    A feel-good, do-good option is to donate your unwanted gift card.
     
    You can do this by handing the card directly to a charity. Consider a church, food bank or school that might use it to buy supplies, or offer it to a needy family in your community.
     
    Cardpool and Compassion International co-founded CardFunder which lets consumers donate gift cards with available funds on them to a number of charitable efforts.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Online Service Will Travel All Over The World On New Year's Eve

    Online Service Will Travel All Over The World On New Year's Eve
    If you aren't looking for a rockin' New Year's Eve or forced small talk between television hosts, an online service is offering a way to experience the beginning of 2016 as it happens all over the world.

    Online Service Will Travel All Over The World On New Year's Eve

    Why Everyone Should Consider Freezing Their Credit Reports To Deter Identity Thieves

    Why Everyone Should Consider Freezing Their Credit Reports To Deter Identity Thieves
    Freeze your credit reports before you get burned. That's the message from security experts, consumer advocates and some state Attorneys General.

    Why Everyone Should Consider Freezing Their Credit Reports To Deter Identity Thieves

    New Year's Resolutions: Researchers Say Questions Better Than Declarations

    New Year's Resolutions: Researchers Say Questions Better Than Declarations
    It's called the "question-behaviour effect," a phenomenon in which asking people about performing a behaviour influences whether they do it in the future.

    New Year's Resolutions: Researchers Say Questions Better Than Declarations

    Vermont Community Rallies To Save 130-year-old Country Store That Was Hub For Residents

    Vermont Community Rallies To Save 130-year-old Country Store That Was Hub For Residents
    Owners Peter and Nancy Davis decided a year ago that they would retire. They put the store on the market but had no buyers so planned to close by Dec. 6.

    Vermont Community Rallies To Save 130-year-old Country Store That Was Hub For Residents

    Vets Remove 2 Large Squeaky Toys From Puppy's Stomach; Doctor Says 'Dogs Eat Crazy Things'

    Vets Remove 2 Large Squeaky Toys From Puppy's Stomach; Doctor Says 'Dogs Eat Crazy Things'
    LEVITTOWN, Pa. — A Philadelphia puppy is getting back to his bouncy self after two plastic squeaky toys were removed from his stomach.

    Vets Remove 2 Large Squeaky Toys From Puppy's Stomach; Doctor Says 'Dogs Eat Crazy Things'

    From Celebrity Endorsements To Branded Logos, The Marijuana Industry Trying To Build Brands

    DENVER — Snoop Dogg has his own line of marijuana. So does Willie Nelson. Melissa Etheridge has a marijuana-infused wine.

    From Celebrity Endorsements To Branded Logos, The Marijuana Industry Trying To Build Brands