Extended warranty is offered on many products these days and while some people found value in them, these plans are rarely a good deal.
Retailers are pushing extended warranties because it generates almost pure profit. It is a triple bet that that the product will breakdown, that the damage will be covered by the extended warranty and that the repair costs will be more than the extended warranty's cost. Considering that the value of electronic products depreciate exponentially these days, purchasing extended warranties will more frequently be money down the drain.
Where possible, charge your purchase to a credit card that extends the manufacturer's warranty and save the premium of the extended warranty. With the quality of products these days, by the time the gadget breaks down, enough will have been saved to replace the faulty product.
If an extended service plan is really percieved to be essential, read the fine print carefully and not rely on the salesperson's assurances. Extended warranty is being paid for to make your life easier, not harder. The terms will definitely be in the store's favour but you have to analyse if it truly benefits you too. When something does go wrong, the worst thing to find out is that you have paid for something that is utterly useless.
FinancialReviews attempts to provide an objective view of financial options, however, personal circumstances will temper the relevance of the reviews. Information on FinancialReviews is good to assist you in decision making but do read and further your own judgements with respect to FinancialReviews postings. Thanks.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
OCBC 365 Credit Card: Dismal Cashback When Minimal Spending of $800 is Unmet
The OCBC 365 Credit Card offers attractive cashback rates, including up to 6% on dining, groceries, and online shopping. However, its $800 m...
-
Never before have I been so keen to take up a promotion I received via email. Within 30 minutes of receiving the POSB MySavings Account emai...
-
The worst thing one can do is to sabotage their own financial plans by engaging in the senseless behaviour of panic selling and panic buying...
-
From the first of next month, Singaporeans turning 55 years old will have to leave $99,600 in their CPF accounts under the Minimum Sum schem...
No comments:
Post a Comment