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Extended Warranties: Buy or Avoid?
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Post 1 made on Friday February 29, 2008 at 11:38
cmckenney
Electronic House Magazine
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September 2007
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Extended Warranties: Buy or Avoid?

Extended warranties are the dirty little secret of the consumer electronics industry. Everyone says they’re a bad deal, and no one wants to admit to purchasing them, but someone is buying them. Electronics stores do make a lot of money on these warranties. People buy them inappropriately, or fail to use them even when they have a valid claim. Still, there are times when an extended warranty can pay off. If you’re considering purchasing an extended warranty, here are a few things to keep in mind:



First, before you buy a warranty, check the instructions on how to use it. The best warranties let you take the equipment back to the store where you bought it (or even better, any store in the chain), and swap for working gear. The next best warranties let you take the gear back to the store for repair. You should be prepared to lose the item for a few weeks, but sometimes they will decide to replace it instead. Things get less convenient when you have to call an 800 number, as this can require shipping your equipment at your expense. The worst are those where the 800 number is run by a third party company. Their profits increase as they provide less service, and so they may make it difficult (long hold times, complex procedures) to exercise your warranty. These warranties may not be worth their cost.

Next, consider warranty overlap. Extended warranty periods are often measured from the day you purchase the item, and run concurrently with the manufacturer’s warranty. If you purchase with a credit card, your credit card company may already double the length of the manufacturer’s warranty, leaving little time for the extended warranty to be the only one in effect. Stores often represent their warranty as “better” than the manufacturer and credit card warranties, but read the fine print carefully, as many of the benefits may not be particularly useful. Most name-brand consumer electronics manufacturers have become better at their own warranty support. So, unless a store offers in-store no-questions-asked replacement, its extended warranty support may be no better than what’s offered by the manufacturer or credit card company.

For more, check out
[Link: electronichouse.com]

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