@Rickibotta Does everything get taxed in Indiana? Here in Florida, health items and most food items are not taxed.
I just got home from a late CVS/Kroger run. I got the $17.79 Alevex spray. No sales tax was applied. I did 2 transactions, one for this and a second for 3 offers-- Flipz bites onsale, bottle of Cheribundi 24oz on sale, and some pure zzzzs. I used my %off and all my extra bucks. Everything went through on Ibotta and Fetch.
Now I am waiting for my 8 offers from Kroger to get accepted. That will leave me with 2 offers to finish my mwb. It's late and I'm tired...Hope my Kroger receipt is completed when I get up tomorrow.
In Indiana, food is not taxed, except some prepared food from the deli. Obviously restaurant and fast food is.. Most candy is. Almost all drinks and everything else is taxed. Perhaps rx not taxed. I think almost all, if not all OTC, such as 'tylenol', cough medicine, , and yes alevex is taxed.
I did a mock order all the way to PAY, and it was taxed, 7% in my locale
@Rickibotta I usually stick with ibuprofen for pain relief, so this one (and the last AleveX freebie) are for donation. I’m all for it when there is no tax, but I do stop and think twice when freebies are taxed. I think it was one of the free witch hazels that made me realize that the tax can creep up on ya when the item has a higher price point.
@Rickibotta As far as I can tell, the Venmo and the PayPal $10 QR offers are separate and distinct to each of the specific apps. For what it’s worth, I no longer see the CVS offer in my Venmo app (as I redeemed it yesterday); but I do still see it in my PayPal app. I intend to try the PayPal QR at CVS “soon”-I’ll report back on the results, and whether or when I receive the $10 in my Venmo account.
Thanks.. precisely what I wanted to know