Buying Refurbished Electronics Saves 20-50% on the Same Gear
If buying refurbished electronics saves is on your radar, this short guide cuts through the noise. Here is what is worth knowing, and how to put it to work today.
Key Takeaways
- Most people hear “refurbished” and picture a scuffed-up return with a mystery defect.
- That instinct keeps shoppers paying full price for what is often the same device with an opened box.
- Certified refurbished inventory is mostly lightly used returns and open-box units.
Most people hear “refurbished” and picture a scuffed-up return with a mystery defect. That instinct keeps shoppers paying full cost for what is frequently the same device with an opened box.
Certified refurbished inventory is mostly lightly used returns and open-box units. Once packaging is opened, the manufacturer can’t sell the device as new, even if it’s flawless, so it gets inspected, repaired with genuine parts, and resold at a discount that reflects a broken seal, not broken hardware.
Apple’s Certified Refurbished iPhones ship with a new battery and outer shell, arrive in a new box with free returns, and carry the same one-year warranty as a new device. Samsung and Microsoft back their certified refurbs for a full year too.
The program is what you’re buying, so stick to certified ones: the manufacturer’s own refurb store (Apple, Samsung, and Dell each run one) or a retailer program like Amazon Renewed. Before checkout, confirm two things. The warranty should match what the new version gets. The strongest programs offer identical coverage, while weaker ones only cover you for a few months. And the return window should let you send the device back if it shows up worse than described.
Skip any listing where “refurbished” is just a word in the title. On an open marketplace, that word means whatever the seller wants it to mean. Certification is the part that carries a guarantee. Stock rotates constantly because inventory depends on returns, so if the model you want isn’t listed today, check again in a week.
Next time an electronics purchase crosses a few hundred dollars, check the certified refurb store before you pay retail. Worst case, nothing’s in stock and you purchase new like you would have anyway.
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The bottom line: a little research on buying refurbished electronics saves goes a long way. Compare your options, watch for seasonal offers, and never pay full price when a better deal is one click away.
Originally published at moneycrashers.com.
Andrew Schrage
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