Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

By Kathy Kristof | Oct 26, 2009 |

Do you know whether the gift cards you’re presenting to friends and relatives come with a slew of fees? If you’re like most people, the answer is a resounding “no,” according to a just-released study by the Consumer Federation of America.

Americans will spend roughly $4 billion on high-fee gift cards this year, often without realizing that the card they’re giving comes loaded with a myriad of fees, said CFA executive director Stephen Brobeck at a press conference today. Only a fraction of those surveyed knew that general-purpose gift cards cost money to purchase and can impose monthly fees.

A new law will restrict some of the fees, but not until next August–way too late for the gift cards you might be contemplating for this holiday season.

Quick primer

There are two types of gift cards–those offered by individual retailers (such as Best Buy or iTunes) and general purpose cards issued by the likes of Visa, MasterCard and American Express. While the general purpose cards can be used at more locations, they also typically come with a pile of fees, such as fees to buy them; fees to “re-load” them; and monthly inactivity fees, if you don’t use them fast enough.

Worse, some retailers won’t let you “split” a purchase, paying for part with a gift card and part with cash, which means that consumers are sometimes unable to spend the remaining balance on the cards. If that wasn’t bad enough, the cards can expire, so what you paid $50 for could end up a worthless piece of plastic in your grandkid’s wallet.

Gift cards issued by individual merchants typically don’t have these fees or expiration dates. But if the retailer goes belly-up, you and your gift card could end up in a long line of hapless creditors in the retailer’s bankruptcy.

Consumer Federation and the National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators are distributing 1.5 million copies of a free gift card wrapper that warns card recipients about gift card risks. If you choose to give gift cards this holiday season, it might be smart to download a few copies, so the recipients can read the warnings.

But here’s a better idea: if you don’t know what to buy your child, grandchild, niece, nephew, friend or associate, give cash. (Checks fall neatly into this category, and are a better choice if you’re sending a gift by mail.) You can spend cash anywhere. It doesn’t expire. And there are no fees to use it.

If you think cash is too impersonal, buy a nice card to go with it and write a personal message, like, “I thought you might want a new video game, but heard that “pong” is no longer all the rage. Under those circumstances, it seems better that you pick it out.”

A lot of marketing dollars have gone into convincing you that giving gift cards is better than giving cash, but that doesn’t make it true.

 
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  •  
    1

    giftcardrescue

    10/27/09 | Report as spam

    Message has been deleted.

  •  
    2

    Lexie808

    11/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    I want cash for Christmas this year, so I made a wish list at myregistry.com. My brother used this site for his wedding registry last year and set up a cash fund for his honeymoon. I don't really want anything in particular this year besides cash, so I decided to make my own registry! And I agree, cash is way better than being screwed over by the hidden fees that come with gift cards!

  •  
    3

    Kathy Kristof

    11/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    Good luck, Lexie. Hope your friends and relatives cooperate!

  •  
    4

    srmurrayut

    11/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    I had an interesting experience trying to use a $25 Visa gift card at a restaurant. The total bill was $23, but their credit card approval system automatically added an estimated tip of $4 and Visa declined the card. Of course we did not know anything about the tip add-on, so we could not understand why a $25 card would be declinced for a $23 purchase.

    After calling Visa Card Services we found that this is universally true with respect to using gift cards at restaurants.

    Moral - Don't use gift cards at restaurants unless it was issued by the restaurant.

  •  
    5

    Kathy Kristof

    11/23/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    I really am beginning to hate these things for reasons just like
    that, Srmurrayut. When you're planning to use a gift card (after
    all, you've been told that it's just like using cash), and they
    decline it because it's not--at all--like cash, it's embarrassing
    and annoying.

  •  
    6

    julie-ette

    12/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    I work for a retail store and with some of the gift cards issued by major credit card companies (Visa, Mastercard and American Express) you have to type in the exact dollar amount that is on the gift card if the purchase is greater than the amount on the gift card. Srmurrayut - if the restaurant had typed in the $25.00 amount that had been on the gift card into the register and then swiped the gift card, you probably could have used it and then paid for the difference in cash or on another credit card. The only reason it was declined is because they tried to bill the entire amount ($27.00) onto a $25.00 gift card.

  •  
    7

    cyndyj

    12/11/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    My Niece loves a Gift Card, at age 14 she goes shopping for what she Needs, not wants....also, I have relatives with Bad Living Choices, Gift Cards are Best as the Cash Would be used to 'buy' goodies from street vendors, I am going to keep the Gift Card Traditions!

  •  
    8

    iluvluvluvlucy

    12/14/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    I love getting gift cards. I also give plenty of them. I love picking out and buying what I want, not some junk that others think I want. The trick is to spend them as soon as you get them, not leave them sitting around collecting dust. How stupid can you be to get free money, which is what a gift card is, and not spend it? Go buy something you want with the gift card within a week or 2 of receiving it and there are no problems. Buy the store gift cards, not Visa as they tack on user fees. Visa, and all of the other credit card companies are crooks on the take for more.

  •  
    9

    Kathy Kristof

    12/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    Hi, CindyJ. I understand the challenges of buying for a teenager.
    In my family, we do shopping excursions to avoid the need to
    give gift cards. They're fun, too. The birthday girl/boy gets to
    pick the stores and we plan for a nice leisurely day, when you
    have lunch and get a chance to communicate with your teen
    too. There are benefits for all.....

  •  
    10

    AMOEBA CARROT

    12/15/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    Gift cards are a RADICAL transformation! They are revolutionary!
    That 20 dollar bill that was good everywhere in the US! It has
    been upgraded to a gift card! A gift card is like money except
    its is so much better because it is plastic, has a cool logo and
    you can only spend it at one store! Who cares about hidden
    prices? NOBODY! Because money good everywhere is sooooo
    bad compared to credit that specializes in one store! ITS AN
    INSTANCED ECONOMY!

  •  
    11

    Kathy Kristof

    12/16/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    Hummm, Amoeba, your comments wouldn't be facetious would
    they? ;-D

  •  
    12

    Destiny4u

    12/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Do Your Friends a Favor and Give Cash, Not Gift Cards

    Watch for items & products best suited for gifts for this holiday season on Joseph's Amazon Store here:

    http://www.joseph-amazon-store.co.nr/

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Kathy Kristof

Kathy Kristof is a syndicated personal finance columnist, speaker and author of three books, including the recently updated Investing 101 (Bloomberg, 2008).

Kathy Kristof

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