Rite Aid 101

Below are the key things to remember about shopping at Rite Aid.
1. You will see the abbreviation SCR on the weekly sales flyer for Rite Aid and on the Internet. SCR stands for Single Check Rebate. This is the amount of money Rite Aid will refund to you in the form of a rebate. You can submit the rebate by mail or directly on Rite Aid’s website (found here). An example of this might be $2 SCR #9. This means you will receive a $2 rebate on that item. The 9 is the rebate number for that item.
2. Sometimes redplum.com has coupons for Rite Aid. The most frequent coupon I see is $5 off a $25 purchase (this is before coupons and rebates).
3. Rite Aid has short videos called Rite Aid Video Values (found here) that you can watch on their website to earn discounts on items featured in those videos. In addition, after watching 20 videos you can earn a coupon for $5 off a $20 purchase.
4. You must go back to Rite Aid’s rebate website at the end of the month to request your rebate. You are given a 30 day window to request your rebate.
5. You can combine coupons with rebates. This often means you will be paid money to purchase items at Rite Aid. For Example: You purchase an item that costs $5 and there is a $5 SCR. In addition you have a $2 coupon for that item. You will pay Rite Aid $3 after the coupon and they will mail you $5. You were just paid $2 for buying that item!
6. Rebates usually have a limit of one per item. Read the weekly flyer closely!












[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]
[...] Rite Aid 101 [...]