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Edited October 11, 2018
at 10:40 AM
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Office Depot OfficeMax Rewards: 100% back in Rewards on Duracell AA/AAA batteries (packs of 16). Limit 2. 09/30/2018 - 10/13/2018.
UPDATE: New terms for the 2nd week (10/07-10/13). Each week is a separate offer. So up to two for week one and up to two for week two. (thanks
DOWNBYTHESEASIDE and
moonuni8)
Duracell Alkaline AA/AAA 16-PK Batteries
SKUs: 242237 (AA), 651674 (AAA)
100% back in Rewards on Duracell AA/AAA batteries (packs of 16).
Limit 2 - 2 TOTAL NOT 2 PER SKU.
NOT 2 PER WEEK. UPDATED: 2 per week.
09/30/2018 - 10/13/2018.
Valid in-store and online.
Office Depot Rewards Offer page (when updated):
http://www.officedepot.com/a/cont...rdsoffers/
Product Page:
http://www.officedepot.com/catalo...674+242237
OFFER TERMS: Bonus Rewards: 100% back on Duracell® Coppertop Alkaline Batteries, 16pk: Valid in store, online, by phone or fax from 9/30/18 to 10/13/18 11:59 PM ET or while supplies last, whichever occurs first. Rewards are Limited to 2 items per member. This offer cannot be combined with other Bonus Rewards offers on the same or similar products and services.
Bonus Rewards: 100% back on Duracell® Coppertop Alkaline Batteries, 16pk: Valid in store, online, by phone or fax from 10/7/18 to 10/13/18 11:59 PM ET or while supplies last, whichever occurs first. Rewards are limited to 2 items per member. This offer cannot be combined with other Bonus Rewards offers on the same or similar products and services.
PROGRAM TERMS: http://www.officedepot.com/cm/hel...conditions
PROGRAM FAQ: https://www.officedepot.com/a/con...ewardsfaq/
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There are many schools of thought about whether or not you can call them free. This is how I think of it:
1. If you shop enough at Office Depot that you will be spending the rewards in place of real money that you would spend anyway, you can consider these batteries free. For example, I used my last rewards to buy postage stamps. They are the same price everywhere, and I needed to buy them anyway, so the batteries I bought to get those rewards were free.
2. If you spend the rewards on things you otherwise wouldn't have bought, or things you would have bought for less elsewhere, the net cost of the batteries range from "really good deal" to "you should have just shopped at amazon", depending on the specifics.
3. If you aren't careful to track things and let the rewards expire without using them, you just paid way too much for batteries.
You pay $16 and get 16 batteries.
Use a reward to buy another set of battery for free.
So you get 32 batteries with $16 while you get 40 batteries with $13.99 from Costco.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.officedepot
Means it's 50% off if you use your rewards to buy more batteries.
There are many schools of thought about whether or not you can call them free. This is how I think of it:
1. If you shop enough at Office Depot that you will be spending the rewards in place of real money that you would spend anyway, you can consider these batteries free. For example, I used my last rewards to buy postage stamps. They are the same price everywhere, and I needed to buy them anyway, so the batteries I bought to get those rewards were free.
2. If you spend the rewards on things you otherwise wouldn't have bought, or things you would have bought for less elsewhere, the net cost of the batteries range from "really good deal" to "you should have just shopped at amazon", depending on the specifics.
3. If you aren't careful to track things and let the rewards expire without using them, you just paid way too much for batteries.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
You pay $16 and get 16 batteries.
Use a reward to buy another set of battery for free.
So you get 32 batteries with $16 while you get 40 batteries with $13.99 from Costco.
I don't understand how $0.50 each battery is a frontpage deal? Maybe for rechargeable but not these.
Every single one of those left in the device for long enough leaked. None of the cheaper Insignia, Kirkland, Energizer, Amazon or other store-branded batteries did. Yet Duracells reliably leak, sometime ruining the device they're in.