Did you find a better price for an item you just purchased at Target? No worries—the store’s “Price Match Guarantee” might have you covered. We’ll go over exactly how you can price match your items at the store or online, as well as the policy’s guidelines, limitations, and exclusions. In a matter of minutes, you’ll be an expert on this handy, money-saving hack.

Things You Should Know

  • Price match at Target in person by visiting a physical store and speaking with a Target team member.
  • Price match online by either calling guest services at 1-800-591-3869 or by chatting online with customer service.
  • Target price matches with many major retailers like Amazon, Costco, Sam’s Club, and Walmart, but huge competitor sales and bundles aren’t eligible.
Section 1 of 7:

How to Price Match (In-Store)

  1. 1
    Search for a cheaper listing on Target’s website or an eligible competitor site. Hop on target.com while you’re in the store and see if you can find a cheaper listing for the physical item you’re about to buy. You can also check other retail sites like Amazon, Best Buy, Costco, CVS, Home Depot, Petsmart, Sam’s Club, Staples, Walgreens, and Walmart.
    • Click here for an official list of retail sites that Target price matches with.
    • You can also check local competitor print ads for a cheaper price listing.
    • You can even price-match groceries at Target. Just make sure that the listing includes the exact same brand, size, and weight as the item that you purchased. The items also need to be the same quantity—for instance, you can’t price-match a single bottle of Gatorade with a multi-pack.
  2. 2
    Show the lower price to the cashier when you check out. Pull up your phone and let the cashier confirm that the listing meets Target’s price match policy. If everything looks good, the cashier will refund you the difference right there.[1]
    • Unfortunately, you can’t do a price match by yourself in self-checkout. Target’s policy requires a team member to check and confirm the price match.
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Section 4 of 7:

Guidelines and Limitations

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    The lower price needs to be active when you’re requesting a price match. Let’s say you’re trying to price match a shirt—you bought it at Target for $22, but you saw it sold on Amazon for $15. That $15 price tag needs to be live and active on Amazon’s site when you request the price match, or else it won’t be eligible.
    • A screenshot of the lower price won’t cut it—the discounted listing needs to be accessible on the website in order for the price match to go through.
  2. 2
    The item listing needs to be completely identical to the item you bought before. Double-check that the brand, size, color, model number, and any other relevant product info on the listing is exactly the same as the product you bought. Even the slightest difference can invalidate your price match request.
    • For instance, you can’t price match a 60-inch Samsung TV with a 60-inch LG TV.
  3. 3
    Target may limit the number of items you can buy with a price match. At the end of the day, Target has the final say in what your price match can be used for. Depending on the item, Target team members might limit the quantity of your price-matched purchases at their discretion.[4]
    • Let’s say you price match a laptop at Target with the exact same model at Best Buy. Target might limit you to buying one laptop rather than buying 2 or 3 at once.
    • If you live in Hawaii or Alaska, you can’t price match with other online stores. You can still use the price match policy with lower prices you find on Target’s website, though.
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Section 5 of 7:

Exclusions

  1. Clearance, used, pre-owned, refurbished, or opened items don’t qualify for price matching. Target’s price match policy only extends to brand-new items that are placed on sale or marked down at a lower price. Drastic clearance and liquidation sales won’t be price-matched, nor will used, refurbished, damaged, or pre-opened items. Other exclusions include:
    • Items sold online by third-party sellers
    • Major sales or offers from competitor sites
    • Specialty purchases like alcohol, cell phone plans, warranties, and pharmacy prescriptions
    • Typo-related price changes[5]

Warnings

  • Target’s price match policy doesn’t extend to listings found on comparison-shopping sites. Make sure that your online listing comes directly from an approved competitor website.[8]
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  • Only SuperTargets can price-match grocery items that are measured by the pound.[9]
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About This Article

Janice Tieperman
Co-authored by:
wikiHow Staff Writer
This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Janice Tieperman. Janice is a professional and creative writer who has worked at wikiHow since 2019. With both a B.A. and M.A. in English from East Stroudsburg University, she has a passion for writing a wide variety of content for anyone and everyone. In her free time, you can find her working on a new crochet pattern, listening to true crime podcasts, or tackling a new creative writing project. This article has been viewed 29,727 times.
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Co-authors: 3
Updated: October 25, 2022
Views: 29,727
Categories: Featured Articles | Shopping
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