- May 5, 2010
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Stonegirl's thread about new laws in her state mandating long gift-certificate expiration laws got me thinking (look out!).
In my state, gift certificates and gift cards may not legally have an expiration date. (You can "retire" a GC or card if you wish, and not honor it, but if you do that, you have to refund the money to the purchaser, or send the purchase price to the state's Unclaimed Property office so they can pick it up if they want it.)
I am so accustomed to this that it doesn't bother me. Although I strongly encourage clients and gift recipients to redeem their GCs ASAP, I am used to having GCs on the books for a long time, and have figured out the fine print to cover situations like rate increases since time of purchase, transfer of certificate, splitting time, cancellation policy, etc.
For those whose states allow an exp. date, do you use one? For those whose states don't allow an exp. date -- how do you feel about that, and has it impacted how you sell GCs?
I have heard mention more than once that outlawing or lengthening GC exp. dates hurts small business, and I'd like to hear more about that too.
Even before our comprehensive law went into effect, I didn't use an exp. date on GCs. Somehow I couldn't wrap my head around getting money for something and then making a decision not to provide it (while keeping the money). (I didn't like it when big stores "expired" gift cards I had paid good money for!) But I know the reasoning must be more complicated than that and I'd like to hear perspective on it.
Thanks!
In my state, gift certificates and gift cards may not legally have an expiration date. (You can "retire" a GC or card if you wish, and not honor it, but if you do that, you have to refund the money to the purchaser, or send the purchase price to the state's Unclaimed Property office so they can pick it up if they want it.)
I am so accustomed to this that it doesn't bother me. Although I strongly encourage clients and gift recipients to redeem their GCs ASAP, I am used to having GCs on the books for a long time, and have figured out the fine print to cover situations like rate increases since time of purchase, transfer of certificate, splitting time, cancellation policy, etc.
For those whose states allow an exp. date, do you use one? For those whose states don't allow an exp. date -- how do you feel about that, and has it impacted how you sell GCs?
I have heard mention more than once that outlawing or lengthening GC exp. dates hurts small business, and I'd like to hear more about that too.
Even before our comprehensive law went into effect, I didn't use an exp. date on GCs. Somehow I couldn't wrap my head around getting money for something and then making a decision not to provide it (while keeping the money). (I didn't like it when big stores "expired" gift cards I had paid good money for!) But I know the reasoning must be more complicated than that and I'd like to hear perspective on it.
Thanks!