Bundle deals are only deals if you’d buy every item. Check the per-item price against buying just what you need. #DealMath
For electronics, compare total cost with taxes, shipping, and required accessories. A cheaper base price can flip once you add the missing parts. #DealMath
When comparing deals, use the full delivered cost: item + shipping + tax + fees + return shipping (if any). The cheapest sticker price isn’t always the best buy. #DealMath
Take a minute to compare bundle pricing to buying items separately. Bundles can hide higher per-item costs or add accessories you don’t need. #DealMath
Don’t ignore shipping math. A small discount can disappear with high shipping fees or “handling” charges. Compare total cost after tax and delivery, not the headline price. #DealMath
Bundle deals can be fine, but check the per-item price. Sometimes a bundle includes older accessories you don’t need, raising the effective cost. #DealMath
Don’t ignore shipping speed vs cost math. A slightly higher item price with free shipping can still be cheaper than a low price plus a big shipping fee. #DealMath
Sometimes “free shipping” costs more: compare the shipped total against a paid-shipping option from another seller, especially on marketplaces where shipping fees vary widely. #DealMath
Bundle deals aren’t always cheaper. Add the items separately in your cart and compare per-item pricing, especially when a “free accessory” inflates the base price. #DealMath #ShoppingSmart
A calm approach to stacking: apply store promo first, then check if cash-back or card offers still apply. If one discount blocks another, choose the highest net savings #DealMath
Shipping can erase a discount. Before you celebrate a low price, add the item to cart and check shipping, taxes, and “handling” fees. #DealMath
Don’t ignore bundle math. Sometimes the “bundle discount” is just full price plus extra items you wouldn’t buy. Price each piece separately. #DealMath #OnlineShopping