Why buy anything if you can trade for it? DVDs aren’t an exception. I’ve been using a service called Swap-a-DVD to trade DVDs for a while now. It’s actually a sister site of the site I use to trade books, paperbackswap. (If I really wanted to, the credits are exchangeable between the two sites.)
The premise is pretty simple. You list the DVDs that you’re willing to trade away, and create a wish list of the DVDs that you would like to see. Other users request the ones you want to trade off, you ship them to the user, and then receive a credit for the DVD once it’s marked as received. Once you have credits, you can then order DVDs for yourself, either off of your wish list when they become available, or by finding DVDs that are already available. Watch that one a few times, then list it to trade away, and you can cycle through them that way.
The only cost is the shipping to send the DVD off for credit. Usually, it figures out to be about $2.50 a DVD. Less than you can rent the DVD for from most places. Most older titles are really easy to come by, with most of the new releases having some pretty long wait lists, but if you’re willing to wait to see the newer movies, you just add them to the wish list, and you’re added to the queue. As soon as you reach the top of the queue, the next one added is yours!
We’ve used it pretty extensively to get movies for the kids. Ones we either can’t find to purchase or rent, or ones we’d like to hold onto for a while so the kids can watch them repeatedly as they usually do. (We’ve seen Cars about 400 times… I wish I was kidding. It was the only movie our son would watch for close to two years) The downside, for us, is that the kids can be somewhat rough on DVDs and they get pretty scratched and we’ve had quite a few of them that were untradeable, if not unusable entirely, by the time they got tired of the movie.
But, if you’ve got slightly older kids that are a little easier on DVDs, it could work out really well. And it works out really well for the movies that us adults like to watch too.
What other ways do you save on watching movies?
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femmefrugality says
I’ve taken my DVDs into used book stores and used media stores before for money. Depending on the store, you can make decent money that way and even turn around and use the credit to buy more new stuff.
Eric says
I have actually been considering selling all of my DVDs except for a few favorites. I use Netflix streaming for the bulk of my entertainment, and owning DVDs is becoming less relevant for me.
Lance @ Money Life and More says
I personally use RedBox for most of my DVD needs. Their selection sucks sometimes but it is by far the cheapest option for us and we aren’t too picky normally.
Money Beagle says
I have a ton of DVDs that I don’t watch. I’d like to just sell them but don’t want to deal with the headache of doing it onesie-twosie.
Richard says
If you are really looking to unload DVDs quickly and easily, use Craigslist. My wife and I sold over 100 DVDs in one batch for a reasonable price ($150). It was much easier than listing each DVD separately on Amazon or eBay. The total profit may be a tad less, but the lack of hassle was worth it.
My Money Design says
This sounds pretty cool – I used to do the same thing with CD’s as they were going out of style. But I stopped because the S&H got to be too much. We pretty much RedBox everything these days. You really can’t beat $1 for a movie. And they always seem to have what you want!