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lspencer534
09-13-2012, 4:19pm
Cliffs: Grad student pays his tuition with rebate debit cards and checks.

His name is Jonathan Hood, a 25-year-old graduate student at Auburn University. Here's how he paid his tuition:

"My dad kind of got me hooked," he told Business Insider. "We stood in line early in the morning and I found out then I could get the games I wanted for either really cheap or for free [with mail-in-rebates]."

Over the next eight years, he would perfect the craft to the point where he could cover his $95/month cell phone bill exclusively with rebates.

Most companies send rebates in the form of prepaid debit cards, while about a third use cash or checks, he said. Almost all the rebates Hood uses are "free-after-rebate" offers, which means he's refunded the full amount.

"I haven't made a payment on my T-Mobile bill without using a rebate debit card for probably two years now."

But it was a month ago that he achieved his greatest feat so far: Using rebates to cover almost a semester's worth of tuition at Auburn University, where he's studying for his PhD.

"Tuition for this semester was $4,500," he said. "I paid over $2,500 of it with prepaid debit cards [from rebates] and a little over $1,000 of it with rebate checks."

He estimates he entered between 200 and 250 prepaid debit cards into the University's online bill pay system. After all the rebates were counted, he was left with less than $1,000 to pay out of pocket.

"On a weekday, I usually have about two or three debit cards or rebate checks coming in," he said. "[Stores] usually have at least one item come up online that's free with a rebate, usually two or three. I'll purchase the item, save the UPC code and mail it in with the receipt."

He shops exclusively online, trolling message boards on deals site Fatwallet.com to find rebate offers he may have missed. It was tips from Fatwallet members that led him to deals at Newegg.com and Frys.com that helped cover his tuition.

There's nothing speedy about the process. It takes as many as four and a half months before he even sees a rebate, and some companies have strict guidelines for rebate submissions. Forget to circle the proper item on your receipt in some cases and you could instantly be denied.

"I' ve only ever lost one rebate," he said. "The company went out of business."

Hood, who works full-time as a computer programmer, developed a special computer program to track outstanding rebates and alert him when they are past due.

Over the years, he has purchased Bluetooth headsets, laptop accessories, and other gadgets. To sweeten the deal, he uses a cash-back credit card to earn an extra 2 percent back on his initial purchase as well. Once he has purchased the items and mails in his rebate form, he often sells the product online to make extra cash. In some cases, he donates items to his church.

Here's how the math adds up, per Hood's calculations:

"My average rebate takes 11 minutes to fill out and cash, and is for $40. My envelopes and pens were free after rebate, so their cost is negligible. For this $40 rebate, I use a 2% cash-back credit card to purchase the item ($0.80 profit) and receive anywhere from 0-5% using FatCash from Fatwallet or a similar service. Stamp price is $0.45. Then, I turn around and sell the item on eBay for an average profit of $11.91 after shipping and taxes per item."

With this semester's tuition paid off and no outstanding student loans to worry about, he's already started stockpiling another fund to cover next year's expenses.

"Currently, [the fund] has $160 in it, but it will probably grow quite a bit in the next couple of days," he said. "I'm expecting about $600 more in rebates."

Genius PhD Student Paid His Tuition With Mail-In-Rebates - Yahoo! Finance (http://finance.yahoo.com/news/genius-phd-student-paid-tuition-232906757.html)

Cybercowboy
09-13-2012, 4:43pm
Ah, so he has to resell all that stuff on eBay. Yuck.

lspencer534
09-13-2012, 4:46pm
Ah, so he has to resell all that stuff on eBay. Yuck.

He's definitely working for his money.

LisaJohn
09-13-2012, 5:17pm
Auburn.

xXBUDXx
09-13-2012, 5:25pm
Auburn.

He uses both sides of his toilet paper.

LisaJohn
09-13-2012, 5:30pm
He uses both sides of his toilet paper.

:lol:

Tossin
09-13-2012, 6:31pm
I paid for my graduate degree by teaching and doing research. :shrug:

kingpin
09-13-2012, 7:17pm
Never mind I see what he does.

I think he may be telling tall tales though.

lspencer534
09-13-2012, 7:22pm
What the **** are these rebates he's talking about?

You buy a product that has a mail in rebate for $10.
You mail in the rebate to the company who the product belongs to.

How and what kind of rebates does he enter in to his schools online payment program to pay for his tuition?

You didn't read the article closely enough. There are many products that wind up costing nothing through the manufacturer's rebate program. For example, you may buy a Kindle, and you get rebate for the full purchase price in the form of a pre-paid credit card. You buy the Kindle and sell it on eBay or to a friend to recoup your purchase price. You're "whole", but you still have the pre-paid credit card.

You give the card to the school, which can buy whatever it wants with it.

kingpin
09-13-2012, 7:33pm
You didn't read the article closely enough. There are many products that wind up costing nothing through the manufacturer's rebate program. For example, you may buy a Kindle, and you get rebate for the full purchase price in the form of a pre-paid credit card. You buy the Kindle and sell it on eBay or to a friend to recoup your purchase price. You're "whole", but you still have the pre-paid credit card.

You give the card to the school, which can buy whatever it wants with it.

I've never heard of anything like that here.
Mail-in rebates yes. They send you a cheque.
Must be where my confusion is coming from.

:cert:

lspencer534
09-13-2012, 7:42pm
I've never heard of anything like that here.
Mail-in rebates yes. They send you a cheque.
Must be where my confusion is coming from.

:cert:

Pre-paid credit cards are the norm here, checks are infrequent. Like I got a $50 pre-paid credit card when I renewed my cell phone service with AT&T. I used it to pay their statement. That's what the grad student is doing, buying a phone or something that 100% rebateable, then selling it, and giving the card to the school.