https://ca.yahoo.com/news/returned-used-toilets-dirty-rugs-090545762.htmlThey returned used toilets and dirty rugs to Costco. Then came the backlash.
Jessica Guynn and Bailey Schulz, USA TODAY
Updated Wed, July 23, 2025 at 7:36 p.m. EDT·10 min read
Evelyn Juarez is a proud card-carrying executive member of Costco. She jokes it’s the only black card she owns.
Every week, her heels click up and down the warehouse aisles as she hunts for new deals, stocks up on groceries and grazes on samples.
In nearly two years, Juarez never returned a purchase, even when her newly purchased rug began to fray. But then her 2-year-old daughter smuggled a bucket of slime into the living room and slopped the blue goo on her ivory-colored rug.
Juarez was about to chuck the stained rug when a friend urged her to take it back instead. “I was like, girl, are you trying to embarrass me?” replied Juarez, a 29-year-old mother of two and social media influencer from Dallas.
But then she got to thinking. “You know what? I have been spending thousands of dollars. I just bought my couches from Costco, too. I don’t think $150 will hurt them.”
She was nervous as she approached the return counter but minutes later, Juarez walked out of the warehouse with a full refund. The next day, she bought a replacement rug from Costco.
“After that, I am going to keep my membership forever,” she said. “I am not sure if it’s out of guilt or out of amazement.”
From low prices on quality products to the wildly popular $1.50 hot dog-and-soda combo, Costco knows how to worm its way into shoppers’ hearts and pantries.
One of its most popular perks is the no-questions-asked (or few questions asked) "risk-free 100% satisfaction guarantee" return policy that fills shoppers with buying confidence and their carts with splurges. Costco gives its customers who pay annual membership fees of $65 to $130 an unlimited grace period to return most purchases for a full refund.
But the liberal policy has become a touchy subject as eyebrow-raising returns go viral, from toilets still sloshing with dirty water to Christmas trees returned after Christmas. Shoppers regularly square off online over what should – and should not be – returned. The online fury reached a fever pitch in 2024 when a Seattle woman got a full refund for a 2 ½-year-old couch because she no longer cared for the color.