Re-gifting the Gift Certificate

Tue Jan 2, 2007 10:01AM EST

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Did you get a gift certificate or gift card for the holidays? They've become quite the mainstay for folks who want to give something a bit more meaningful and festive than cash. But they can be the gift you'd rather not have. An L.L. Bean gift card doesn't cut it for a fleece hater; the Williams-Sonoma card doesn't do much for the non-cook. Maybe you'd just rather have the cash? Maybe you've got a pile of expired gift cards you're always forgetting to use and hate the thought of adding another one?

Whatever the reason, there are a bunch of places on the web where you can buy, trade, swap, and auction gift cards and certificates. Typically, a card or certificate sells for a little less than the face value of the card. So, for example, a $50 Barnes & Noble certificate might be listed for $45. Typically, there's also some sort of transaction fee, usually for the seller. Sometimes it's a fixed price and sometimes it's a percentage of the transaction.

Here are some of the sites I stumbled across as the subject of unloading unwanted certificates came up over our holiday.

CertificateSwap lets you register and list your certificate for free. When it sells, there's a 7.5 percent processing fee for the seller.

Cardavenue lets you buy and sell, but you can trade or auction too. The auction is handled much like an eBay auction. CardAvenue takes 3.9 percent of the transaction. If you want to trade you can specify what card you'd like to trade for and they'll notify you.

Gift Card Buy Back will simply buy your card from you for a percentage of its value, and it lists the percentages it'll pay. Then it lets you buy a gift card as much as 20 percent off of the face value, so it all evens out.

Swapagift.com offers immediate cash for your cards and posts a list of how much it'll pay (anywhere from 60 to 75 percent of the value on the card seems to be the average). Or you can pay a flat fee of $3.99 and sell your gift card directly to another site user.

GiftCardBazaar, like Swapagift, buys your card for a straight 68 percent of its value or will give you a credit toward buying another gift card from their site at slightly better rate.

Two great blog posts that do a good job of covering the re-gifting certificates territory come from ProBargainHunter and The Tao of Making Money.

Be forewarned. There are plenty of ways to get scammed when buying and selling gift cards. After all, you're buying a piece of plastic that's like cash, only you have no way of verifying what's on the card until you go to spend it and you face things like expiration dates. The FTC offers some cautionary advice for using gift cards.

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  • 26 Posted by iamkittee on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:22PM EDT Report Abuse

    Personally, I would rather get cash than a giftcard; and if not cash, than a giftcard rather than a present that is obviously not me.... and lets all get real here, the reason we give & get gift cards is because we really don't know the person we are giving them to well enough to buy a gift they would like.... but feel that we OWE them a gift of some kind

  • 27 Posted by rea_wom on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    i love getting gift cards. I usually use them right away. It doesn;t matter if its LL Bean or Dogs are Us.

  • 28 Posted by veerzaara_nj on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    I do believe that its the thought that counts, and we should be thankful for what we receive. However, if you're really putting thought into what you buy for someone, then you should buy what you know they can use and not buy for the sake of buying just to say, oh I gave someone a gift. Gift cards are a nice idea, because then the person can get what they really want, but if you're giving someone a Gift card, you should try to give them for somewhere that you know they enjoy shopping at, because giftcards are not redeemable at the store for cash and what is the point if you're forced to buy stuff you don't really want or need just to utilise that gift card.

  • 29 Posted by bnbt2004 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hello, SHORTy9742000, what an extreme comment! If someone such as a distant relative gave you a gift card to a place you don't go to then that person did not put too much thought into the gift. Therefore what the heck are you going to do with a gift card say to a sushi place if you don't even eat sushi! People (those that don't know you very well) should keep gift cards general like a Wal Mart, Shoe Store, Mall Certificates...that way you can actually enjoy them! Gift cards are nice only when you are unsure as to what the person already has or wants...you still need to put thought into it. That does not mean the receiver of a Gander Mountain or Bass pro card (where as they don't do "out doors") is selfish or as you put it "sorry excuse for a human being". Your prospective is very narrow!

  • 30 Posted by zuul023 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 11:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    W/E I think giving Gift Cards/Certificates are worse than giving cash. At least with cash you choose where you get to spend it. Even with these websites you will lose a bunch of money selling your card off. Either know the person you are giving to, or give them cash ;p And if you insist on buying a sweater, whatever for someone, please give a gift receipt.

  • 31 Posted by music_girl_1993 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ya, so what if you get a gift card you don't want. It's tacky to re-gift. People are so selfish...

  • 32 Posted by lukelms on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    To each his own. I would rather give/get a gift card than something that would need to be returned for some reason. My 26 year old daughter loves them because it forces her to buy something for herself and not pay bills with just the cash that gets easily spent. It is sad that so many people are so cynical about gifts. Get over yourselves and just enjoy life!

  • 33 Posted by mitchinamerica on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:22PM EDT Report Abuse

    Gift Cards are a stupid marketing ploy. They take Cash, which is perfectly good anywhere, and cripple and handicap it. Stores and have deliberately made "cash" out to somehow be less personal, and meaningful. It is a scam. The stores make Billions, yes Billions, of dollars on unused and lost gift cards. Circuit City alone reported a 45 million dollar profit from unused gift cards. That is ONE company! Cash can be extremely meaningful, it depends how it is presented. Tastefully wrapped with a thoughtful card, it is a 'perfect' gift, far better than any gift card. * Cash never expires, * Cash never forces people to go to a store they don't shop at * Cash is accepted everywhere. * Cash has no service fees. * Cash does not have a magnetic strip that can be damaged rendered it useless. * When you don't spend all the cash, you get cash back, not a card with a trivial amount of money left on it. * Cash lets someone by exactly what they want, where they want. * Cash is more easily added with other cash to save for that really big gift the person is saving for. Cash can be given with intentions, you might suggest something you thought the person might like, but by giving Cash, you can allow the person to make their own choice. Example: "I know you like gardening, I saw some garden tools that I thought you might need at X shop." Include the cash which is enough to get them. Cash will let your giftee go to shop Y or Z as well, if they like your idea.

  • 34 Posted by hotdahem on Thu Oct 1, 2009 8:11PM EDT Report Abuse

    No, gift cards aren't the most spectacular idea. To me it shows a lack of thought and say's "here's a gift card, I didn't have the desire to buy you something so go shop for yourself", which forces the card holder to spend their time and gas to pick out a gift. On the other hand, giving one a gift card doesn't necessarily mean that you don't think enough of them to purchase them an actual gift. People can be difficult to shop for and there's alway's those who you just can't please no matter what you do. I believe gift cards were disigned for them. After all, if you use common sense and purchase one at a major retailer even they should be able to find something they might fancy.

  • 35 Posted by crazysandy2002 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    OH my.. gift cards are a wonderful gift, and if you can't find something in a store that the card is from, then YOU have problems, you can always buy x-mas presents for next year, b-day presents for someone, ANY holiday gift.......Or drop the cards off to catholic charities, shelters, foster homes--give to someone WHO really needs it and someone who will be very thankful and actually use it before expiration date......

  • 36 Posted by susantabakian@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:50PM EDT Report Abuse

    Really, people... There are wars going on in the world and this is what you are talking about? Just give it to someone who can use it and call it a day. OMG...

  • 37 Posted by bo_sage on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    ^ was kind of a stupid comment. Buying gift cards is hardly a task that means going out of one's way. A lot of grocery stores carry multiple cards for different places, and buying a gift card is actually a way of saying I don't know what you want and I don't want to think about it.

  • 38 Posted by dbeard811@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    This site is free and you can swap gift cards to other stores that you like....... www.leveragecard.com

  • 39 Posted by kson3keener@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    Have a gift card you can't use? Why not hand it to a complete stranger? You get the warm fuzzies from being kind. They get the gift card to spend. Just ask them to pass along the favor!

  • 40 Posted by johelena12@att.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    Posted by shortyd9742000 on Thu Jan 4, 2007 8:26PM EST Report Abuse hello. if you guys dont use these you guys are not only too picky and selfish but also sorry excuses for human beings they went out of ther way to get these cards. ummmm, this is a joke, right? I mean, they're just gift cards... I honestly think that no human being has gone OUT OF THEIR WAY to buy a giftcard... they're always right next to the cash register and it doesn't take much thought to get it. You're odd... quite odd...

  • 42 Posted by john-t-miller@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree with just about every comment. Bu, if you're too busy to do you own shopping or to take your kid shopping, stop commenting on shopping stories and go to amazon or ebay and your shopping is just a click away. Quit complaining and take you probably lonely chil to the park... good grief!

  • 43 Posted by pgcmarketlink@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    Let's make a deal America! Effective immediately - in the spirit of the New Year - promise me and the rest of America, that if you are going to Post A Comment to this or any other Blog, first learn how to spell correctly.

  • 44 Posted by imbettyboop@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:23PM EDT Report Abuse

    If you are going to give a Gift Card to someone try to make it a general card that can be spent anywhere, don't limit the person you are giving it to, to shop at one place. I work at a bank that sells the Visa Gift Cards, non reloadable, at one time a co-worker sold 64 at one time to a company. I myself sold 22. The ONLY problem is with non reloadable cards is that our land fills will have them for how many years? Give cards that can be reloaded. Have a GREAT 2008, stop complaining. :)

  • 45 Posted by trixihope on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    y no use the unwanted gift card to buy a gift for a person on YOUR list? it would save you money just like gettin cash for it!

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