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Trade in Your Old Electronics

They may be worth more than you think

by Robert E. Calem

Techlicious.com

This article has been provided by our editorial partners at Techlicious, the website that makes tech simple with practical tips for saving money, saving time, and getting more out of the technology in your life.

Chances are, somewhere in your home you have at least one piece of technology that once was cutting-edge but now is obsolete — or perhaps just broken. You’d sell it for cash if you could. Yet the complexities of eBay are just too daunting and you absolutely don't want strangers knocking on your door in response to a Craigslist ad. But you're resistant to tossing it out with the garbage to have it buried in a landfill.

What to do?

A multitude of websites and major retailers — including Radio Shack, Sears, Walmart, Costco, and Best Buy — run trade-in programs, competing to buy a surprisingly wide assortment of used consumer electronics products directly from individuals. They will also pick up the shipping costs, or just conduct the transaction at a store near you. And even if your stuff is truly worthless, they’ll still take it for proper recycling, albeit usually without free shipping or compensation.

With all these programs, the procedure is usually straightforward. It starts with a visit to a trade-in website, where you’ll navigate through categories of products the business will accept, to locate the exact product you want to sell. After you've answered questions about the condition of your item, you will receive an estimate of its trade-in value. If you then agree to accept this payment, the program will provide a pre-paid shipping label — and maybe the packing material as well — for you to send the item to an evaluation center.

Once it's received at the center, your item will be inspected. If its condition matches your assessment, the agreed-to payment will be processed and mailed to you within weeks.

With in-store trade-ins, you'll still go through the first steps online, but then carry the item in yourself for evaluation by a store employee, who may pay you on the spot, usually with a store-issued gift card.

Shop Around

There are too many trade-in websites to list and cover in this space, but some of the leaders — which you should consider checking first — are BuyMyTronics.com, Gazelle.com, and CExchange.com. Gazelle and CExchange also are the engines behind some private-label trade-in programs. Programs at Costco.com, Walmart.com, and Sears.com are operated by Gazelle, and those at RadioShack.com, Crutchfield.com, Wirefly.com, and BrandSource.com are operated by CExchange. The trade-in center at BestBuy.com is powered by Dealtree.com, which the retailer owns.

Don’t check just one trade-in program, though. Values offered for the same item, in the same condition, can vary widely from site to site. Recently, for example, BuyMyTronics offered $189 for an iPad 32GB Wi-Fi model, while Cexchange offered $369.10.

The amount paid also can vary with the type of compensation you choose. For instance, Best Buy will reduce its offer if you choose to receive cash for your trade-in rather than a store gift card. Meanwhile, Gazelle.com will pay you a five-percent bonus for choosing an Amazon.com gift card rather than its other options — a check, a PayPal account deposit, Walmart Prepaid VISA, or a donation to one of more than 100 listed charities.

There is one more reason to shop around at different trade-in programs: They don't all take all kinds of products. For example, BuyMyTronics buys e-book readers like the Amazon Kindle, but CExchange does not. Although Gazelle buys satellite radios, BuyMyTronics does not. Neither BuyMyTronics nor Gazelle buys HDTVs, but CExchange does.

Of course, the programs are constantly expanding the categories they cover and the number of products listed within those categories. For example, Gazelle now encompasses 22 categories, up from 12 at the end of 2008.

If you can't find what you want to sell at Gazelle or CExchange, both allow you to suggest products to add to their trade-in lists — within the confines of the categories they already cover.

The timing of your trade-in could be important, too. In general, products post sharp declines in value in their first six months on store shelves, and then more gradual declines. Popular products will retain higher values longer, and could still be saleable three years past their debut. Nevertheless, at any time it's possible for a trade-in value to drop dramatically if a product's popularity wanes.

Finally, a new site called EcoSquid is working to provide both one-stop comparison shopping among product trade-in services and recycling opportunities for used electronics. So far the recycling program, which covers 33 product categories, is far more expansive than the trade-in opportunities, which are limited to cell phones and MP3 players. However, EcoSquid promises to add more trade-in opportunities in the near future, and in test searches for supported products, we received a range of offers from multiple sites, without having to surf and click our way through an extended deal hunt.

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