July 16, 2026 9:01 am EDT
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Home Depot opened its first two stores in Atlanta in June 1979, and I’ve been fixing my own house and rental properties pretty much ever since. That’s over 40 years of leaky faucets, dead water heaters, warped decking and ceiling fans that wobble.

I’ve bought a lot of stuff in those orange aisles. Lumber, paint, more drill bits than I want to admit.

But here’s the thing about a store that sells everything under one roof. It can’t possibly be the best place to buy everything.

And a couple of the things Home Depot sells aren’t physical items at all. They’re financial products waiting for you at the register.

Those are the ones that’ll really get you.

Here are seven things I leave on the shelf.

1. The protection plan

You’re standing there with a $700 washing machine, and someone offers you three years of “protection” for another hundred bucks.

Say no.

The pitch is relentless for a reason: These plans are enormously profitable. According to research from the nonprofit Consumers’ Checkbook, retailers selling policies for third-party insurers typically pocket commissions of 40% to 60%. Analysts estimate that less than 20 cents of every extended-warranty dollar ever comes back out as claims.

Consumer Reports has been saying it for years. Stores keep half or more of what they charge for these contracts — a far better margin than they earn selling you the actual appliance.

The math on your side is worse. The average appliance repair visit runs around $200, and the odds of a breakdown in the first three years are low.

So you’re paying $100 to insure a maybe-$200 event that probably won’t happen.

Skip it. Bank the hundred. If the washer dies, you’ve got the money. If it doesn’t, you keep it.

Then check your credit card. Many extend the manufacturer’s warranty for free. I dug into the whole racket in “Ask Stacy: Are Service Plans and Extended Warranties Worth It?”

2. Anything on the Home Depot card you can’t pay off fast

That “no interest if paid in full” offer at checkout? Read it again. Find the word “if.”

That’s a deferred interest promotion, and it isn’t the same animal as 0% APR. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau specifically names Home Depot among the major retailers whose store cards carry the feature.

Here’s the trap.

With true 0% financing, if you still owe money when the promo ends, you start paying interest on what’s left.

With deferred interest, the lender charges you interest retroactively — calculated back to the original purchase date, on the original purchase amount, not the balance you have left.

Miss the deadline by one day and you owe interest on money you already paid back.

I’ve been a CPA since 1981, and that’s the kind of arithmetic that makes me wince. You can do everything right for 11 months and still get billed for all 12.

The rates make it worse. CFPB survey data shows more than 90% of retail credit cards carry a maximum purchase APR above 30%, compared with just 38% of general-purpose cards.

Can you pay it off with room to spare? Fine. Are you hoping to squeak in under the wire? Walk away.

3. Installation on a job you could bid out yourself

Home Depot doesn’t install your floor. A local contractor does.

The company says so itself. Its own website describes the people doing the work as “Independent, Authorized Service Providers.” Home Depot’s job is to find the contractor, coordinate the project and collect the money.

Nothing shady about that. Those installers are licensed, insured and background-checked.

But you’re paying for a middleman. And when something goes wrong, you’re calling a coordinator — not the person holding the hammer.

So for anything straightforward — a dishwasher swap, a ceiling fan, a storm door — get Home Depot’s quote, then get two from local contractors.

Sometimes the Depot wins. Often it doesn’t. You’ll never know unless you ask.

4. A major appliance you haven’t priced anywhere else

A few years back, my 14-year-old refrigerator started making a knocking sound in the middle of the night. I knew exactly what that meant.

Amazon didn’t stock the replacement model I wanted. Home Depot had it but couldn’t deliver for two weeks. Lowe’s had one sitting right there on the floor.

They sold me that floor model for a little over $2,000 — marked down from $2,600 — with free delivery. (I walked through the full process in “How to Buy a Refrigerator, Step by Step.”)

Home Depot is one of maybe five stores selling the identical box. Prices swing hard between them, and floor models and open-box units can knock off hundreds.

Never buy a big appliance at the first store you walk into. Home Depot included.

Quick aside — most internet financial advice comes from people who weren’t alive during the last recession. I’ve been writing about money for more than 35 years. Want rock-solid advice? Sign up for the free Money Talks Newsletter. Takes 10 seconds. No fluff. No spam.

5. The cheapest tool on the shelf

Home Depot stocks tools at every price point. That’s a feature, not a bug — but the bottom rung is a trap for the wrong buyer.

Going to use a drill twice in your life? Buy the cheap one. Seriously.

Going to use it every weekend for a decade? The cheap one will die, you’ll buy the good one anyway, and you’ll have paid for both.

Match the tool to how often you’ll actually pick it up.

And if you need something exactly once — a tile saw, a floor sander, a carpet stretcher — rent it. Home Depot rents tools, and that part’s a genuine deal. There’s more where that came from in “9 Things You Can Get for Free at Home Improvement Stores.”

6. A single bolt

This one costs you time, not money.

You need one specific screw. At Home Depot, that means wandering a warehouse the size of an airplane hangar, hunting down an employee, and hoping.

At the hardware store on the corner, somebody walks you to the bin.

That’s not just me grumbling. In a recent Market Force Information study, Ace Hardware and Menards both outscored Home Depot and Lowe’s on customer experience, with Ace taking top marks for staff availability and helpfulness. We broke down the findings in “Which Home Improvement Store Are Americans Most Loyal To? Not Home Depot or Lowe’s.”

Big-box for big loads. Corner shop for small fixes.

7. Lumber you haven’t put your hands on

A stack of 2x4s is not a uniform product.

Warped, twisted, cupped, split — it’s all in that pile, priced exactly the same as the straight stuff.

So when you’re in a Home Depot or Lowe’s, pull them one at a time. Sight down the edge like you’re aiming a rifle.

Take the extra 10 minutes. That’s free money.

And if you’re building something that has to last, price a real lumberyard first. Better grades, and the person behind the counter has usually built something.

The bottom line

Home Depot isn’t a bad store. It’s a great store, and I’ll likely be in one before the month is out.

But it’s a store. Not a friend, not an advisor, and definitely not a lender you should trust without reading every word of the fine print.

The stuff on the shelves is mostly fine.

It’s what they sell you at the register — the protection plan, the credit card, the installation package — where the real margins hide.

Know which aisle you’re standing in.

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