Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do always try to provide a gift receipt.. Don't like it? Can't use it? Please get something you will use! That is my goal.
Same here! I don't want to spend money on a gift that someone just tosses into the closet. I do provide a gift receipt for that reason. Wouldn't bother me at all if someone returns a gift I give.
Anonymous wrote:I just had a problem where the Amazon gift didn’t have the full gift receipt slips, apparently it was missing the one with the QR code and Amazon’s suggestion (after speaking with two associates) was to ask the giver for the order # to do a return.
Anonymous wrote:Would you return a gift?
Would you ask for a gift receipt if the gift came without it?
Would you tell the gift giver you returned/exchanged their gift?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't try to return to Amazon. My SIL returned something I bought one of her kids. Something that was specifically on the wish list. I didn't realize for awhile then saw a credit in my account from that return. She returned it, I got the credit, and found out. She never mentioned it at all.
Maybe her kid got two of the same item.
Anonymous wrote:Would you return a gift?
Would you ask for a gift receipt if the gift came without it?
Would you tell the gift giver you returned/exchanged their gift?
Anonymous wrote:Would you return a gift?
Would you ask for a gift receipt if the gift came without it?
Would you tell the gift giver you returned/exchanged their gift?
Anonymous wrote:Don't try to return to Amazon. My SIL returned something I bought one of her kids. Something that was specifically on the wish list. I didn't realize for awhile then saw a credit in my account from that return. She returned it, I got the credit, and found out. She never mentioned it at all.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is a rich vs poor argument. Only well off people are going to talk about gift etiquette and how you just accept a gift and then give it away if you don’t like it.
People who are struggling financially are going to exchange an unneeded item for something that will get used. Sometimes that means they have to ask for a receipt, sometimes it doesn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can return or dispose of a gift however you want, discretely and after graciously receiving it.
You definitely can’t ask for a gift receipt. I mean maybe if it’s from immediate family and that works for your relationship.
Don’t tell. Don’t ask.
So you’d rather someone throw away/regift you gift instead of returning it and using the money for something they like?
If I receive a gift I don’t like/need/it’s a duplicate, I’d rather return it and get something else and consider it that the gift giver gave me that new gift I picked.
It’d be cumbersome and annoying to have to deal with a gift I don’t need. I’d see it as having been assigned a task.
A gift should be a pleasure not a burden on the recipient.