What You Need to Know About Warranties

Before you sign up for extended coverage, make sure you're getting the protection you pay for.

1. Retailers love them. In fact, retailers may reap more profit from warranty contracts on appliances and major electronics than they do on the products themselves (that's why sales-people are coached to urge you to buy the extra coverage). Typically, you'll pay 10% to 20% more for an item to extend a one-year manufacturer's warranty through the fifth year of ownership, according to the Service Contract Industry Council. Most retailers hand off the contract to a third-party administrator in exchange for up to half of what you paid.

2. Odds are you won't need it. Celia Kuperszmid Lehrman, of Consumer Reports, says that most major appliances do not break down within the extended-warranty period (among the exceptions are refrigerators with icemakers, electric wall ovens and dishwashers). When they do, she adds, the cost of repair roughly equals the cost of the extended warranty.

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Patricia Mertz Esswein
Contributing Writer, Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Esswein joined Kiplinger in May 1984 as director of special publications and managing editor of Kiplinger Books. In 2004, she began covering real estate for Kiplinger's Personal Finance, writing about the housing market, buying and selling a home, getting a mortgage, and home improvement. Prior to joining Kiplinger, Esswein wrote and edited for Empire Sports, a monthly magazine covering sports and recreation in upstate New York. She holds a BA degree from Gustavus Adolphus College, in St. Peter, Minn., and an MA in magazine journalism from the S.I. Newhouse School at Syracuse University.