personally I would rather donate some things that I didn't want instead of selling it.
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personally I would rather donate some things that I didn't want instead of selling it.
Great! So we have people taking whole tear pads, people clearing entire shelves, people selling items they cleared from a store so others have no chance for the mere fact so that they profit selling a manufacturers item at there yard sales.... what has couponing come to :icon_scratch:. Whats the point of a manufacturer trying to provide consumers with coupons any more.
wow your attack is uncalled for !
nobody is talking about shelf clearing to sell at garage sales or taking all the coupons ....and where do you suppose the toys/clothes/dishes /mops/brooms ect come from ? Manufacturers make these items also for which coupons are also available.....
and it may have been a lot of couponing items but unless you ask nobody knows how the ppl aquired these items .....they may have a store gone out of business...or used their SDM points to buy all the items....
who am i attacking? i am incorparating a few different rant threads into this one. Manufacturers create these coupons for consumers yes, not just a hand full of people for the purpose that they profit of off what they manufacturer.
how do you know coupons were even used ??? or shelves were cleared ect,.,...
agree with you op doesn't know that a single coupon was used or do i. But if i had lets say 60 trutaste milk cartons(just an example) on sale in my front yard last week, i don't think it be hard to speculate. I do thinks its ok to sell out an item that you have some financial input into (like you previously said, what if consumer had allergies etc), which has happened to me previously and i have simply returned the item to the store. But in all honesty is it fair to others who use the product regularly be unable to buy the product because someone will clear it intentionally fully knowing that they will not use it for the mere fact they are getting it free or a good overage and then turning around to try to sell it at a yard sale? sooner or later the manufacturers get smarter with these things and it makes like difficult for us all... not that what i say or anyone says here will have much of a change the direction that couponing is headin towards
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I agree with you it is not right....... but really what you and I think will not stop the ppl who clear shelves/ re-sell for profit or take more than their fair share of coupons or products to profit an prevent others from sharing in the sales ect......it is a never ending circle !!
To the OP. Did the person holding the garage sale tell you they bought it with coupons? I ask, because my DH is in the auction game. You don't know the number of lots that go up for auction that have bags and bags FULL of things that are readily available to purchase with coupons. So to say that the are reselling what they bought with coupons is assuming, and may not be the case, that they may have bought the items at auction for a steal, and are reselling THOSE items, which is quite common practice...Just some food for thought, and for everyone not to quickly judge. You may not see what you think you are seeing. And yes, some of those lots have NUMEROUS of the same itwm from a store bankrupsy, so not neccesarily a shelf clearing event.
the OP said they were selling "couponing stuff" but did not clarify what that means. This entire thread is due to people jumping to conclusions. The OP could mean selling coupon binders for all we know
I wish the OP would come back and clarify what she meant by "couponing stuff". It's kind of pointless when you're vague with your rants!
Aren't there tax implications doing this?
I know that in the UK if you buy things specifically to resell them then the Tax Man wants his share of your profit. They're really cracking down on people doing this on Ebay and at 'car boot sales'.
:shrug:not sure as my upcoming yard sale will mainly be gently loved treasures :) few items are new still in box but they are things like a game /yard toys /and dishes LOL ...I like my stash but :shock:not enough to drag it out to the yard ....and once my sale is done I am calling someone to take whatever is left to donate :)
Sorry, not to hijack a thread, but please do consider donating whatever is left to anyone you might know in your community having a yard sale for the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation. It's called Yard Sale for the Cure and you can find out more about them here: http://www.yardsaleforthecure.com/
Yes they said they had bought stuff with coupons. They had 4 8 foot tables and 10 baskets full of items. I might add too that there was 1 table of used items (not from couponing but from house not being used) Example was Duracell chargers for $7 each she had in excess of 30 or more
Just started reading this thread and I am with Jezebel on this. However this comment caught my eye
Just because Walmart puts a sticker on their goods do they have the "right" to tell you what to do with it after it is sold. Is the mere sticker the authority? Can anyone put stickers on their goods?
Sorry if I'm segwaying...but I'm really curious about this.
after something is SOLD it is no longer mine...therefore I loose the right to say what can happen/what to do with said item.....
I've seen these stickers on Safeway items too. If you'll notice, it's only for fairly expensive products, such as razor blades, cosmetics, etc. Believe it or not, people steal from retailers and sell to people at the flea markets. I think these "resellers" even take orders for what items they want in their "inventory". I'm sure they wouldn't do it if they didn't have customers who will buy this pilfered stuff.
yea the stickers on the products are mearly for this reason.....there are theifs that take lists of what discount stores need and look for and thats what they steal...and the large stores want them caught so they can #1 get the bad stores brought down..the theives in jail and so on...its not for the every day consumer that may sell some of thier stuff at a yard sale. and no it is not illegal to resell as long as its not stolen. if you got these products legally..I say do what you want, the police couldnt care less and if they got a call from someone about people selling stuff like that at their yardsale, they might just charge you for wasting their time...to each his own.like me...i dont have a baby but i got 3 boxes of good start concentrate..it was regular 35.00 on for 1.99 on clearance..i bought it..no coupons and your right i sold them for profit..they got a hell of a deal and i made a little extra for this months groceries.
if someone is reselling, they need to collect the taxes, be registered and licensed, issue receipts etc.
selling it and saying "well i needed the cash, i'm on hard times ya know" doesn't cut it.
i totally read the title wrong. I thought people shopped at yard sale and used coupons.....
i thought it's illegal to sell stuff you bought with coupons....
You can re-sell items you've purchased and not used, but purchasing items for the purposes of re-sale is crossing a line.
While you can argue that "once I buy it, it's mine to do with what I want", and "Loblaws buys from someone else and re-sells, so I can do the same", it's not the same thing. Most manufacturers of products sell their products through their wholesale sales divisions (working as a distributor, not selling to the public) only to authorized retailers. While the stores don't advertize that they're authorized distributors in the same way that Avon or Arbonne reps will, the same types of exclusivity contracts exist so that the product manufacturers still have a say over how the products are placed, advertized, etc. Selling outside of these contracts is often forbidden (think of when no name products declare that they are "Manufactured exclusively for Loblaws Corporation"). If you've ever shopped at a P&G warehouse sale for example, your receipt likely states, along with all the "no exchanges and refunds" language, that "Resale of merchandise/products purchased at this sale is forbidden" - at least that's what it used to say when they did this at the truckload sales in my hometown.
If people are doing this as a money-maker, they also should be registered with a business licence or vendor's permit and be charging either provincial sales taxes or HST depending on how much they earn per year in gross revenues. Their gross sales need to be declared as income, sales taxes need to be remitted, and income taxes paid on the income. If those conditions are satisfied, and you are selling things which are not covered by some sort of exclusivity contract for resale, then it's legal.
But, as an aside to my arguments above, buying personal care products at a yard sale, in my humble opinion, is just more than a little bit gross. There are too many possibilities for the product to be expired, recalled, tampered with in some way, or to be a fake/forgery like the ones you see at flea markets. Just my two cents, but I'll stick to going to the 'usual suspect' big retailers for my deodorant, shampoo, and similar products.