New York Post

Unhappy returns costing shoppers

- By ARIEL ZILBER azilber@nypost.com

The days of shoppers sending back unwanted or ill-fitting items for free are basically over as the holiday gift-giving season gives way to the giftreturn­ing season.

More than four in five merchants now charge customers a fee to ship back or return an item they don’t want, according to a report from logistics firm Happy Returns.

Amazon has started charging customers $1 to return items to a UPS store instead of using a Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh grocery store or Kohl’s — since it owns or has partnershi­p deals with those companies.

Zara, Macy’s, Abercrombi­e & Fitch, J.Crew, H&M and others have also added shipping fees for mail-in returns, according to CNN.

Abercrombi­e is charging customers a $7 fee to return items while American Eagle Outfitters deducts a $5 fee from mail-in returns that do not qualify for free returns.

Dillard’s is charging $9.95 to return items by mail while H&M is forcing customers to fork over a $5.99 return shipping fee.

JCPenney’s fee on mail-in returns is $8, while J.Crew charges $7.50.

The change was motivated primarily by the mounting cost of both the initial sale of the item as well as the expenses incurred through processing the return.

Last year, customers sent back almost 17% of the total merchandis­e they purchased — totaling some $816 billion, according to the National Retail Federation.

The 17% figure was more than double the 8% in 2019.

The process of handling returns eats into retailers’ bottom lines. According to retail services firm Inmar Intelligen­ce, retailers spend $27 to handle a return for a $100 item that was bought online.

Analysts estimate companies lose around 50% of their margin on returns when factoring in the cost of selling the item as well as the processing of the return, according to The Wall Street Journal.

In years past, retailers were willing to absorb the cost in the belief that generous return policies would keep customers coming back.

But the scope of the problem has grown to the point where merchants are now being forced to charge a fee.

“We’re heading for a trillion-dollar problem here,” Tom Enright, a retail analyst at research firm Gartner, told the Journal.

 ?? ?? Now that the holiday gift-giving season is winding down, gift receivers who are looking to return unwanted, ill-fitting or damaged items will be socked with a fee by more merchants, according to a report.
Now that the holiday gift-giving season is winding down, gift receivers who are looking to return unwanted, ill-fitting or damaged items will be socked with a fee by more merchants, according to a report.

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