How to stop online shopping addiction
Stop unhealthy online shopping habits with these helpful tips.
ProblemSolved, USA TODAY
Deloitte estimates that holiday sales this year will increase 2.3% to 3.3% over 2023 to $1.59 trillion. While inflation is slowing, prices for many goods are still much higher than last year and retailers will be doing their best to maximize profits with more advertising and extended store hours.
The Better Business Bureau (BBB) has advice for consumers to shop smart and avoid holiday shopping scams.
Research a company you’ve never done business with (and even ones you have shopped with to verify their reputation is still good). Check them out on BBB.org and read online reviews to learn if other consumers have had a good experience with them. The BBB seal on a retailer’s website or storefront indicates it’s pledged to uphold the BBB Standards for Trust in dealing with its customers.
Price check before you buy. If multiple retailers claim to have the absolute lowest price on an item, some offers are misleading. The best deal may not be the real deal.
Use a credit card if possible so you’ll have some recourse if something goes wrong with the purchase. You may have less protection with a debit card or other form of payment.
Return and exchange policies may change during the holiday season, particularly for “final sale” or “closeout” items, so be sure you know what they are if there’s any possibility you may not keep an item. If you can’t find the return policy on an online shopping site, go elsewhere. Be sure to get gift receipts so the recipient can return or exchange an item. If you’re shopping at a retailer that’s announced it’s going out of business, be sure you understand how a product warranty will be handled.
Online shopping scams accounted for 41% of all scams reported to the BBB’s Scam Tracker service in 2023 and they pick up during the holidays. The BBB offers these additional tips when shopping online:
Be particularly careful if you’re shopping for the season’s hottest toy or other must-have item that stores have run out of but a website claims to have an abundant supply of at a low price. Or you spot an ad in your social media feed.
Chances are you’ll provide your personal and payment information and get nothing in return or a cheap counterfeit version. And maybe become the victim of identity theft.
Randy Hutchinson is president and CEO of Better Business Bureau of the Mid-South.
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