Consumer Buying
Should-I-buy calls and A-versus-B comparisons for common purchases, weighed on cost, effort, risk and who it's actually for.
Gym membership vs home workout: which should I choose?
Choose a gym if you need equipment, structure or the social push to show up; choose home workouts if convenience and cost are what actually keep you consistent.
AnswerIs a robot vacuum worth it?
Worth it if you have mostly hard floors or low carpet and want daily maintenance cleaning — but it complements rather than replaces a regular vacuum, and clutter or thick rugs limit it.
AnswerIs buying in bulk worth it?
Worth it for shelf-stable staples you reliably use — but a false economy for perishables, things you might not finish, or bulk deals that aren't actually cheaper per unit.
AnswerIs it worth buying an extended warranty?
Usually no — for most electronics and appliances the price is high relative to the odds and cost of failure, so skip it unless the item is genuinely fragile or expensive to repair.
AnswerShould I buy a book or borrow it?
Borrow by default from the library and buy only the books you'll reference repeatedly, mark up, or want to keep — most books are read once, which is exactly what borrowing is for.
AnswerShould I buy generic or brand-name?
Buy generic by default and pay for the brand only where a real, tested difference matters to you — for many staples the contents are near-identical and the brand premium is mostly marketing.
AnswerShould I buy refurbished electronics?
Often yes — certified refurbished gear from a reputable seller with a real warranty gives you most of the value of new at a meaningful discount, as long as you check the grade and return policy.
AnswerShould I fix a broken appliance or buy a new one?
Repair if the fix costs less than about half a comparable new unit and the appliance isn't near the end of its typical lifespan — otherwise replacing is usually the better value.
AnswerShould I rent or buy tools and equipment?
Buy what you'll use repeatedly and store easily; rent the expensive, bulky or once-off items — the break-even is roughly how many times you'll actually use it.