Free Laptop Nation: How Free Is It?
NOTICE: Before reading this post, I strongly suggest skipping over to read my article “How to Get Laptops and Plasma TVs for Free” first to understand some of the terminology I use and my method for getting “free” goodies.
Recently, I was surprised to hear an advertisement by FreeLaptopNation.com on the radio. I’ve honestly never heard one of these sites openly advertise except through spam mail. I decided to do my own research into their offers and see how they matched up to my experiences when I got 2 other laptops for “free” (again, see my instructional post). Below you’ll see a full rundown of the offers, terms & conditions and some sample expected costs I gathered from detailed research.
The Homepage and Laptop Selections
As of right now, Free Laptop Nation is offering 5 different laptops. Of course none of these sites ever give out the specific model information:
- Compaq Presario Laptop
- Gateway Laptop
- Toshiba Satellite Laptop
- Sony Vaio Laptop
- Apple iBook (what, not a Macbook?)
Since my current Sony Vaio laptop is getting a little run-down, I decided to opt for another Vaio. In addition to a laptop, you also choose a $200 gas card/cash card as an “added bonus”.
Before proceeding with entering my email information, I made sure to save, as a PDF, every link on the homepage including the homepage itself. I made sure to capture the About, Terms & Conditions, Help, Contact Us and Privacy Policy pages for posterity. I’ve learned from experience to cover my butt in case I proceed with these offers.
The Requirements
Also, as is my custom, I made sure to read through the entire Terms & Conditions page before proceeding. I don’t want to deal with referring others to complete the offers before I can get my laptop, but this site didn’t have that requirement. For this laptop deal, you needed to complete 10 total offers (2 from page one, 2 from page two, and 6 from page three) .
In addition (and this is something new to me), this site has a Cancellation Limitation! As you now know from reading my walkthrough, the only way to really make out on these deals is by canceling the offers within the trial periods. However, according to Free Laptop Nation’s T&C:
You will not be eligible to receive a Gift in this Promotion if, within 60 days of your Sponsor Offer Initial Transaction Date, you cancel your participation in more than two Sponsor Offers you have completed as a part of the Program Requirements (the “Cancellation Limitation”). The Cancellation Limitation applies regardless of whether such limitations appear in the advertiser’s terms and conditions for the applicable Sponsor Offer.
In other words, you can’t cancel more than 2 offers within the first 60 days or you’ll be disqualified! That sucks! Whether they can reasonably enforce this rule is unknown to me, but for the sake of my research, I’ll assume I need to hold onto at least 8 of the 10 offers for 60 days. We’ll see if this makes it all too costly to proceed.
The “Surveys”
Before you can get to the “advertiser offers”, you first need to go through a series of questions. The questions were pretty standard and I just said “No” to every offer. These questions have no bearing on your “gift fulfillment” (per the Terms & Conditions) so you have no obligation to accept anything at this time. Just continue on to the good stuff: the offer pages.
The Offers
So here is the make-or-break part of the deal. I haven’t done any of these offers for 2 years now because every site requires me to open a car loan or buy an expensive resort package. Again, per my instructional article, I jumped directly to page 3 to see what the most restrictive and expensive offers are. Additionally, I’m required to sign up for 6 offers on page 3, so this is a big deal.
I was surprised to find a slew of offers on each of the three pages and I scrolled through to the last page. Normally there’s only about 6-10 offers on the last page, but there were 16 offers on this one. I printed out each page into a PDF file for my records (although I don’t think they would be happy with me posting the PDFs here, so don’t ask).
Next, I’m going to outline my findings, expected costs for reasonable offers and then give my verdict on whether the site is worth the hassle.
Sample Cost of Fulfilling the Offers
As I mentioned above, I always start with the offers on page 3. Some offers appear on multiple pages, so I want to make sure to do the easiest ones on page 3 because it’s so difficult to keep the costs down otherwise. I dug around on every reputable offer site to find out the total costs involved, and then tracked it all in a spreadsheet. At the end, I’ll have a single number to show how much I would expect to spend to get this “free laptop”.
One more thing before moving on. When I say “reputable offer”, I mean sites I trust or at least sites that don’t bring back results when I Google their name plus the word “scam”. For example, from experience I refuse to sign up for any weight loss or diet pill offers. These are complete and utter scams, without a doubt. Believe me on that one.
PAGE THREE:
From the 16 total options, I had to pick 6 to complete. Scrolling through the list, I really only found 6 that were reasonable and trustworthy (except where noted below):
- Discover More Card - Clear: The cheapest options you have with these offers is generally to sign up for a credit card. If you’re not worried about your credit score, go for it. Usually, you need to make one small purchase or a balance transfer for the deal to count as a complete offer. Cost: Free
- Discover More Card - Platinum: Another credit card. Cost: Free
- Discover Open Road Card: Yet another credit card. Cost: Free
- HSBC Bank Card: The last credit card. Cost: Free
- Blockbuster Total Access: I was a recent subscriber, but the deal only requires that it’s a new signup. Cost: $9.99 for 1 month up front.
- Onlingo Language Lessons: This is the one offer I can’t attest to its quality because of the potential price if you don’t cancel, but since it was the lesser of the remaining evils (see diet pill comment above), I would opt for it. Cost: $6.95 for shipping up front.
PAGE TWO:
Next up was page two. I found that I had less options since many of the offers I would complete on page three are also found here. I had to complete only 2 offers, and I eventually did find 2 that I would be comfortable with though:
- eMusic: I had to do some digging, but it looks like you get 50 free songs for signing up, but the lowest monthly plan after that is $5.99 per month. Cost: Free (up front)
- Gamefly: Since I have a Wii, I had thought about renting games through the mail like Netflix. However, I don’t go through games fast enough to make it cost effective, but since this is a good chance to kill two birds, I’d try it. Cost: $8.95 for the first month, up front.
PAGE ONE:
Last up is another 2 offers off page one. Again, many of the offers overlapped from the other pages, and I had trouble finding a second offer (see below). I’m not sure about the one choice, but as I mentioned above, it’s the lesser of the remaining evils.
- Netflix: I probably couldn’t actually do this one if I wanted since I recently renewed our subscription, but it was the only totally trustworthy offer on page 1. Cost: $8.99 for one month up front.
- Stamps.com: I really had to do some digging to find out what the catch is with this service. Apparently it would be a free trial then cost $15.99 per month afterwards. Cost: Free (up front)
I always keep a spreadsheet of the offers, so below is the outline of each offer and more details about each:

Total Costs of the Offers
As you can see from the chart above, the up front cost to get a laptop probably valued at $1000 would be $34.98 with the offers I selected. Again, that’s just the cost I absolutely must pay to meet the basic requirements.
However, as you read above, there is a cancellation limitation, which means I need to hold onto 8 of the 10 offers for at least 60 days. That’s where they really get you. Otherwise for me, the final cost would also be $34.98. In the chart, I include the Monthly Cost after Intro to show the true cost of the services. Take note that the OnLingo service is $69.95 per month! Wow! The Total 60-Day Cost Before Cancellations is $308.60! Granted, you might want to actually keep some of these services, but only if you want to swim in movies and games and Spanish CDs.
So in the last column, I show the Total 60-Day Cost After 2 Cancellations. Right off the bat I would cancel the OnLingo deal. That’s $140 saved right there. Next, I would probably cancel Blockbuster because it’s the next highest total 60-day cost. So I would bring the final cost down to $128.72 for this “free” laptop.
The Final Verdict
For me, based on experience, spending $128.72 and a couple hours of work (total) and waiting 3-4 months for a $1000-1200 laptop (if you need one) AND getting a $200 gas card isn’t a bad deal. Like I said, I got 2 laptops this way as well as a $1000 Visa gift card. However, keep in mind that you’ll probably have to pay taxes on this “gift”. I say “probably” because it’s up to the marketer to collect your tax information before sending the gift, or then it’s up to you to claim it (which is the legal thing to do!).
However, in the end, I’m not going to proceed with this offer because I don’t need a laptop that bad, and my employer also covers up to $500 for a new one. If it was under different circumstances, and I wasn’t so lazy right now, I would go for it.
Lastly, if you’re the type who isn’t organized and on top of things (like knowing when to cancel and actually canceling), then these types of deals are definitely not for you. You would be the one in the end to spend the $308, and maybe even more, and probably forget to claim the laptop! You have to be organized, persistent and responsible to do these deals.
If you do decide to perform any of these offers, I hope you utilize my tips article as well as this article to help organize your approach and remind you of the important details and steps as you proceed. And again, always research the companies before you sign up for anything to find out what other people have to say (good or bad), and document everything! Good luck!
Try one of these related posts too!:
- Thanks for the Hits: March 2008 Traffic and Referral Numbers
- Best Finance Articles from Carnival of Personal Finance #144
- I need advice: Help with finding the right laptop
- Reader Poll Results: Are you a PF Blogger too?
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First, I gotta say “wow”. I never knew such deals existed. Second, nice job on describing the entire process and making it easy to follow/understand.
Lastly, thanks a lot for making such a thing so tempting!
I really really could use another computer right now, but have been burned in the past by signing up for contracts like this and canceling. Now I have to figure out what I want to do! *chuckle*
Great article. I might have to try this out.
Have you heard much about the “Free iPhone” offers. I’ve always wanted an iPhone…
Tom, I’ve considered offers for lower priced items like iPods or $500 gift cards, but I found that the cost would be the same as the bigger stuff, as would the hassle. Therefore I just go for the big things like laptops and TVs.
Just make sure you price everything out ahead of time, do research on the marketing company AND the offer companies and cover your butt with documentation!
I’ve considered doing these things before, but I’ve never gone through with it. I did get a free ipod shuffle though ipodrewards.com. I didn’t have to spend any money, but it took me a while…and a lot of spam to a hotmail account to get one.
I’ve gotten close to jumping at a few of these deals in the past… just makes me nervous to share my information with some online marketing company that I can’t find the address for. Some of them, I think, require a SSN for gifts over $600 (as you mentioned, you have to pay gift tax on it).
Dude,
Great advice! You were asking “what, not a Macbook?”. I think I found a mirror site to freelaptopnation.com with a MacBook - http://www.getmyfreelaptop.com/. I might have to check this one out, but will definitely follow your advice and cover my butt.
I like how you went through the deal. These deals are legit and the advertisers are hoping you forget to cancel the services. Those trials are loss leaders on the ‘free laptop’ you’ll get, so they hope to recover their costs. I think the 60 day cancel thing was done on purpose so you can’t just sign up and cancel in a normal 30 day window. Not that I need a laptop right now, I’m tempted to consider trying an offer like this just to validate if it actually works. Netflix and Gamefly are things I would actually like to try too, few credit cards and couple hours of work, not bad.
I’m going through the freelaptopnation.com now. I’ve hit a page where it is requiring me to say “Yes” to see one of the offers. Looks like they are now even on to the “say no to everything” path. Next thing I expect to see is them randomly switching the positions of the Yes and No radio buttons so when you click down the list of them you unwittingly are saying yes to some of the offers.
Bob, I’ve seen some sites do that too, but you should be able to cancel out of the “Yes” offer they force you into without having to sign up for anything. Let me know if it really does force you to sign up for something.
Thank you for making sense out of the marketing of this product. It outlines all the costs.
Hi.
I tried and follow the guide. But Discover Card only let me sign up for the first one. Do you have to wait the 30 days to do the 2nd, and then another 30 days for the 3rd? Because by then it’ll be a long long time…
Please help.
Peter, sorry but I wasn’t aware that Discover put limits on their cards. If so, and they actually track the source, then you’re probably stuck and need to either contact Free Laptop Nation or sign up for a different offer.
thanks for the info and great article. I figured it would be to good to be true, and wondered what the catch was.
Did your “free” laptops come with software?
Nicki, yep, both laptops came with Windows XP Pro and various software like Roxio, etc. They weren’t used or anything
Well I ended up signing up for the Kids learning program and a Online Business Strategy thing that teaches you how to start your own business at home. Hopefully I didn’t miss anything.
Wow you really ae clever. I knew there was a catch but I didn’t think about all THIS stuff.
Wow what a great article!!! Thanks for the tips!
Did you have to send in an officially notarization of a W9 form? as part of the fulfillment?
@JT: It doesn’t need to be notarized, and not all companies require the form (although the law requires it).
WOW!! Thank you! I can’t tell you how much your article saved me! But now I will be expecting more atricles!!
I just needed to find a good deal, and you have helped me with that!!
Thank you and i hope you will be more help to me in the future!!
You only covered the 1st tier of the offers. There are 3 of them. We attempted to get a free laptop from them, and once we got to the 2nd tier, we had 2nd thoughts. Now we are disputing all the charges for the free trials, and the items we wanted to return, with the credit card company. Why not just return them? We were told by every company, that we either wouldn’t get a refund, or the refund would only be 50%.