The most popular item on wish lists this holiday season isn’t a pair of Airpods, the PlayStation Portal, or a Sabrina Carpenter vinyl album.
Like just about every year for the last decade-plus, the present of choice will be the gift card.
Gift cards are so popular that they account for 55% of the average shopper’s entire annual gift budget.
Zachary Crockett / The Hustle
In an ideal world, the gift card is a win-win: For the buyer, it’s a hassle-free gifting experience; for the recipient, it’s a cash equivalent that can be used at any store or restaurant.
But gift cards aren’t always ideal. Oftentimes, they go unused — whether we lose them, forget we have them, let them expire, or fail to spend the full amount that was gifted.
And when that happens, there’s only one winner: The companies that sell the cards.
When gift cards go unused
Most people who receive a gift card are quick to put it to use: More than 70% of all gift cards are redeemed within 6 months of purchase, according to one survey.
But after that first 180 days, the rate of use tends to stagnate. At the one year mark, just under 80% of cards are redeemed — and as time passes, they are less and less likely to see the light of day.
At any given time, 10% to 19% of gift card balances remain unredeemed — and around 6% of gift cards are nevereven used.
Zachary Crockett / The Hustle
These small percentage points add up to big money when you consider that, over the past 10 years, more than $1 trillion in gift cards have been sold.
Between 2005 and 2015 alone, unredeemed gift card balances amounted to an estimated $45.7B. That’s a hell of a lot of Cheesecake Factory dinners!
The reasons we don’t spend gift card money can vary:
We simply forget we had the gift card.
We lose the gift card.
We don’t like the retailer/restaurant that issued the gift card.
We can’t access the retailer/restaurant due to location or other factors.
We buy something of lesser value and leave the leftover amount on the card.
The gift card expires and/or comes with restrictions.
It should also be noted that, despite federal protections, gift card issuers can still charge “inactivity fees” in certain states if the consumer doesn’t use his card within 12 months. These fees might range from $2 to $5 per month, making a gift card balance difficult to pin down after a few years of non-use.
But what happens on the retail side when gift cards go unused? Are corporations like Starbucks and Walmart just getting money for nothing?
Why retailers love gift cards
When grandma buys a gift card to The Cheesecake Factory, she exchanges $25 in fungible cash for $25 in-store credit that can be redeemed at a later date.
Big companies like The Cheesecake Factory use what is called accrual accounting, which means that money is tallied not when it is received, but when it is earned. In other words, grandma’s $25 isn’t counted as revenue until the gift card is redeemed.
A selection of gift cards for sale at a Michaels arts and crafts store in California (Zachary Crockett / The Hustle)
Under a 2009 federal law, most gift cards can’t expire for 5 years (and in many states, like California, they can never expire). Companies have to plan for the possibility that gift cards may be redeemed at some point in the distant future — and until then, any unused gift card balances are earmarked as liabilities.
But after a certain amount of time (typically, 6-24 months), the law also permits companies to turn these liabilities into what’s called breakage income.
This is the amount of money from gift cards that the company estimates will never be redeemed. Another way to put it: That’s the amount of money the company is essentially getting for free.
For instance, let’s say you never spend the $25 gift card to The Cheesecake Factory that grandma gave you. Your grandma paid the chain $25 and the chain didn’t have to give you anything in return. It netted $25 at a 100% profit margin.
In 2017, 5 companies banked over $20m in breakage income, according to figures listed in annual reports.
Zachary Crockett / The Hustle
To put this into perspective, here’s what this money could’ve bought the consumers who put their gift card funds to use:
Chipotle’s annual report gives us some insight into how beneficial gift cards can be for big companies: The chain claims that, on average, 4% of its gift cards are never redeemed. That means that the company gets to pocket $1 out of every $25 gift card purchase at virtually no cost.
Some states, like Delaware and New York, have passed laws that entitle the state to unclaimed property, including gift card money. But by and large, the corporations who issue the cards still get to keep most unused gift card funds.
Despite this, retailers claim they make more money when consumers spend their cards. Here’s why:
75% of people who redeem gift cards end up spending more than the value on their cards (e.g., they’ll use a $50 gift card to make a $100 purchase).
On average, shoppers spend $59 more than the value of their gift cards.
Shoppers using gift cards are 2.5x more likely to pay full price for an item than a customer paying with cash/credit card.
34% of shoppers say a gift card prompts them to visit a store they otherwise wouldn’t frequent (good for new customer adoption).
Gift cards often aren’t redeemed in one trip, prompting shoppers to return multiple times (good for foot traffic metrics).
None of this means that gift cards are an inherently bad gift — especially those that have more general applications (Visa, Amazon, etc.).
But in the eyes of many economists, there is a much more enticing alternative…
Straight up cash
In a Scrooge-worthy 1993 paper titled “The Deadweight Loss of Christmas,” economist Joel Waldfogel (now an economics professor at the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management) asked a bunch of Yale students to place a monetary value on the holiday gifts they’d received.
His conclusion: Recipients valued their gifts at between 10% and 30% less than what the gift giver paid for them.
Zachary Crockett / The Hustle
If Waldfogel’s estimates held true today, it would mean that between $73B and $219B of the $730B consumers spend on gifts during the holidays (including $17B to $51B in gift cards) is virtually wasted in the transaction process.
The most economical and rational gift, suggests Waldfogel, is cash.
Naysayers would argue that cash in an envelope is against the intimate, personal, and symbolic spirit of gift-giving. But then again, so are little plastic cards.
The good news is that there is now an entire ecosystem of sites where gift cards can be exchanged for cash at anywhere from 60% to 90% of the value of the card. In a matter of minutes, a $50 gift card can be converted into $40 of legal tender.
These platforms liberate your gift card money from the shackles of coffee, steak, or 900-calorie hunks of cheesecake, and allow you to spend it on your own terms.
Though either way, the gift card giver’s hard-earned dollars still end up in the pockets of companies that have done very little to earn them.
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