Anonymous wrote:Some of you people are so cheap!
I do at least $25-30.
Question- if someone gave your child a gift for $20/30
You feel okay giving a cheap gift for $5/10 in return ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but I think the idea of stocking up on clearance items to give as gifts is weird. I like to get a gift for the specific person. Not every kid likes the same stuff and I can't think of any kid who would be excited about opening some random scarf from Old Navy or a water bottle? And if I'm your cousin's girlfriend or whatever and I'm coming to your house for Christmas, I don't expect or want you to give me some random item from your generic gift closet.
You save a lot of money on the actual items you're stocking up on but it still seems wasteful if you're just buying a bunch of generic stuff that you don't actually know if anyone would want/like.
+1 I remember another thread where a PP said they just stocked up on stomp rockets and gave every child that. I thought that was so odd. What if a child lives in an apt or townhouse without access to a yard? Also so many people bought stomp rockets during the pandemic that its highly likely a family already has that.
Parents pass these along to the next kid. A friend gives all kids one of those mist bottles and bike lights. Kids love them.
Anonymous wrote:At least $20, at most $50. Probably $20-$30. You can’t barely buy lunch for $10/15 so I’m surprised people say $10/15
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For just a classmate with a low key park/home party, $10, definitely less than $15. A little more up to $25 for a kid he considers a friend, or if it’s a nicer party at a play place or a nice home party with bounce houses and actual food.
It's crappy that you give a lower-cost gift to a kid whose parents maybe can't afford a fancier party. Really crappy of you. It's actually the poorer kids I go out of my way to give BIGGER gifts to.
We do this for kids who are not close friends - Escape Room or Bowlero parties get more $ because I think of it as subsidizing the cost of the experience. A family in our neighborhood has a pool party in their backyard with donuts every year. They are not poor by any means or at least from what I can tell (pool in the backyard, 1.5 mil house in suburbs). Their kid brings mine art kits from Michaels which cost $10. So we tend to match that when we go to their kid’s party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For just a classmate with a low key park/home party, $10, definitely less than $15. A little more up to $25 for a kid he considers a friend, or if it’s a nicer party at a play place or a nice home party with bounce houses and actual food.
It's crappy that you give a lower-cost gift to a kid whose parents maybe can't afford a fancier party. Really crappy of you. It's actually the poorer kids I go out of my way to give BIGGER gifts to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but I think the idea of stocking up on clearance items to give as gifts is weird. I like to get a gift for the specific person. Not every kid likes the same stuff and I can't think of any kid who would be excited about opening some random scarf from Old Navy or a water bottle? And if I'm your cousin's girlfriend or whatever and I'm coming to your house for Christmas, I don't expect or want you to give me some random item from your generic gift closet.
You save a lot of money on the actual items you're stocking up on but it still seems wasteful if you're just buying a bunch of generic stuff that you don't actually know if anyone would want/like.
+1 I remember another thread where a PP said they just stocked up on stomp rockets and gave every child that. I thought that was so odd. What if a child lives in an apt or townhouse without access to a yard? Also so many people bought stomp rockets during the pandemic that its highly likely a family already has that.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but I think the idea of stocking up on clearance items to give as gifts is weird. I like to get a gift for the specific person. Not every kid likes the same stuff and I can't think of any kid who would be excited about opening some random scarf from Old Navy or a water bottle? And if I'm your cousin's girlfriend or whatever and I'm coming to your house for Christmas, I don't expect or want you to give me some random item from your generic gift closet.
You save a lot of money on the actual items you're stocking up on but it still seems wasteful if you're just buying a bunch of generic stuff that you don't actually know if anyone would want/like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For just a classmate with a low key park/home party, $10, definitely less than $15. A little more up to $25 for a kid he considers a friend, or if it’s a nicer party at a play place or a nice home party with bounce houses and actual food.
It's crappy that you give a lower-cost gift to a kid whose parents maybe can't afford a fancier party. Really crappy of you. It's actually the poorer kids I go out of my way to give BIGGER gifts to.
Anonymous wrote:For just a classmate with a low key park/home party, $10, definitely less than $15. A little more up to $25 for a kid he considers a friend, or if it’s a nicer party at a play place or a nice home party with bounce houses and actual food.