Is It Possible To Return Building Supplies To Menards?

Menards offers a 30- or 90-day return window for items purchased online, depending on the product. Customers can return items in-store or via mail, with instructions available on Menards’ website for online purchases. Items from Menards’ Marketplace are subject to the return policies of third-party sellers, so it is important to review these policies before purchasing.

Menards offers a variety of products, including pet and wildlife, building materials, tools, kitchen, medallion cabinets, plumbing, lighting and ceiling fans, electrical, and heating and cooling. Most new, unused materials can be refunded or exchanged within 90 days of the original purchase date, with an additional 365 days for purchases made with a Lowe’s commercial account (LCA). To begin the return process, customers can use the online form provided by Menards.com® and can return items in any condition, especially with a receipt.

In-store returns are not accepted, and after 14 days, the product will be returned to the sales floor. Stock merchandise that is cut or altered will be subject to a 25 restocking fee. Menards does not accept returns for custom items like windows, doors, or building plans. Customers can print a Return Receipt at the customer’s discretion without a receipt.

Non-custom made special order products may be refunded at Menards’ sole discretion with a 25 restocking fee. Returns must include items in their original condition and packaging.


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Can I return an opened can of paint?

The company offers return services for unopened paint and supplies, but customers are responsible for shipping costs. Opened items or those without original packaging cannot be accepted. Returns must be made within 30 days of delivery, and paint and supplies are subject to a $10 per gallon restocking fee. Samples, including 3×5 Color Cards, Peel and Stick SIMPLESAMPLES™, 6oz Color Samplers, Fan Decks, and apparel, are final sale. If there is an issue with your order, please contact hello@dunnedwardsdura. com.

What is non returnable at Home Depot?

It should be noted that Home Depot gift cards are non-returnable and non-refundable. Furthermore, they cannot be redeemed or exchanged for cash, check, or credit unless required by law.

Can you return uncut lumber?
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Can you return uncut lumber?

To qualify for a return, all covered and protected materials must have been protected on your yard. Items must be uncut and in the same condition as when purchased. Treated and fire retardant lumber cannot be returned. Check purchases have a waiting period of up to 10 business days before refunds can be processed. Special order items are non-refundable unless authorized by the vendor. Customers should contact their salesperson to request a return.

If the purchase is within 45 days, every attempt will be made. Any restocking fee charged by the vendor will be passed on to the customer. Online and shipped orders can be returned with a full merchandise refund up to 45 days from the date of shipment, provided the items are in resalable condition.

Can custom paint be returned to Lowes?

The Paint Guarantee and Paint Color Guarantee offer a 30-day satisfaction guarantee for purchases of interior and exterior liquid paint, stain, or resurfacers. In order to qualify for this guarantee, the product must be returned in its original container.

Is Lowes strict on return policy?

Lowe’s provides a 90-day return policy for most in-store and online items, allowing customers to return items that don’t meet their needs, are defective, or were the wrong purchase. Proof of purchase is required, and exceptions exist for certain products like electronics, outdoor power equipment, major appliances, and seasonal items. The policy is customer-friendly but has some exceptions.

What is Menards return policy on lumber?

Menards offers returns within 90 days of purchase, with checks and cash refunds available for purchases less than 6 days old. To return products, customers must bring their receipt or order confirmation email to the Service Desk at any Menards location or on MENARDS. COM®. Credit for returns should be received within 7 to 10 days after the order is received and processed by the warehouse. Customers can return products at any Menards location or on MENARDS. COM® to any store.

Can you return custom paint to Menards?

It is the policy of Menards® to decline to refund custom-made special order merchandise. However, non-custom-made items may be eligible for a refund at Menards®’s discretion, subject to a 25% restocking fee.

Is wood refundable at Home Depot?
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Is wood refundable at Home Depot?

In an indoor lumber store, customers can return items by checking in at the customer service desk or contractor’s desk. The store attendant will scan the items and issue a refund or credit on the spot. If returning a large amount of lumber, customers should explain their process and the number of boards they have. The store can then bring necessary carts or forklifts to move the lumber back into the store for re-stocking.

For outdoor lumber stores, customers should go directly to the outdoor lumber entrance or yard gate. The gate attendant will prepare a return slip for the items returned, and a receipt or one original bar code sticker for store credit is required. The return slip will be given to the location in the outdoor yard where the boards originally came from, and employees in the yard will help unload the lumber and sign off on the return slip.

Is lumber returnable?
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Is lumber returnable?

To return lumber from an outdoor lumber yard, go to the yard gate and inform the gate attendant about your return. They will prepare a return slip for the items you brought back. You need a receipt for a cash refund or one original bar code sticker for a store credit. After completing the slip, the gate attendant will direct you to the original location in the outdoor yard where the boards originated.

Find an employee in that area to help unload the lumber and sign off on the return slip. After receiving the yard employee’s signature, leave the outdoor lumber yard and go to the main building’s customer service desk. The desk clerk can process your return and issue a refund or credit.

Is lumber returnable at Home Depot?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Is lumber returnable at Home Depot?

In an indoor lumber store, customers can return items by checking in at the customer service desk or contractor’s desk. The store attendant will scan the items and issue a refund or credit on the spot. If returning a large amount of lumber, customers should explain their process and the number of boards they have. The store can then bring necessary carts or forklifts to move the lumber back into the store for re-stocking.

For outdoor lumber stores, customers should go directly to the outdoor lumber entrance or yard gate. The gate attendant will prepare a return slip for the items returned, and a receipt or one original bar code sticker for store credit is required. The return slip will be given to the location in the outdoor yard where the boards originally came from, and employees in the yard will help unload the lumber and sign off on the return slip.

Can you return unused material to Home Depot?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Can you return unused material to Home Depot?

The Home Depot allows the majority of merchandise returns within 90 days of the original purchase date, provided that the customer can present proof of purchase. Exceptions to this policy may be made at the discretion of the store management. Nevertheless, the establishment reserves the right to decline returns for defects that are not the result of manufacturing, damage caused by the customer, or in cases where fraud or abuse is suspected.


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Is It Possible To Return Building Supplies To Menards?
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Rafaela Priori Gutler

Hi, I’m Rafaela Priori Gutler, a passionate interior designer and DIY enthusiast. I love transforming spaces into beautiful, functional havens through creative decor and practical advice. Whether it’s a small DIY project or a full home makeover, I’m here to share my tips, tricks, and inspiration to help you design the space of your dreams. Let’s make your home as unique as you are!

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30 comments

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  • No, don’t ask us which brand to do next; instead, tell us WHO sold you that garbage because it was obvious you were scammed. Come on! Empty power tool cases? You know they sifted through them and took them out…do you honestly think that a store would take back an empty tool box sans tool for a return? SCAM!

  • A minimum price of a hole saw is $10. You have some fairly large ones – which can cost significantly more. 191 hole saws at $10 per = $1,910 Money made – if you don’t count all of the time having to deal with a lot of junk. You can also easily sell the various plastic tool boxes for a minimum of $5 per…

  • I would start contacting every makerspace, Habitat for Humanity, vocational school etc in the area and see what they will come and take. In my area, there’s a “tool library” where you can rent/borrow tools to do charity work and if you could contact them and have them pickup some items that would be good too. Establish a relationship with these folks so that you have somewhere for these “return pallets” to go. I agree with another comment that the hole saws are worth something – not sure if you could sell them in sets to make it less effort to sell? I think the bags would be great for makerspaces/tool library to create “kits” of the tools with all of the accessories.

  • Broken bits can be sharpened and turned into say log bits you dont mind running into ground etc. Its still has the flute and its high carbon steel even if its missing the carbide end. Gloves and such are useful if the size fits. I would absolutely love that impact even though its wrecked, just fix the shell or get broken one to get the shell and since i dont run milwaukee swap it to Dewalt or Makita batteries easy enough. Those empty cases have suitable metal latches so great for tools that dont have cases and you need on to go, say cut the inside off and put in foam for your chosen tools or equipment. Those bags would be good for get out bags of tools you need on the run job, just pack based on the job, actually kinda looked one before but prices were ridiculous for what i saw for non tool brand ones. For resellable stuff inventory and sell it to store that sell stuff like this. For the broken ones, donate or give them to people who can fix them for their own use.

  • From a shelf price perspective… the hole saws themselves have brought 3x your money back. Those things aren’t cheap. I just averaged $25 per hole saw. Came back at $4,775. But selling all those would be a pain and take enough time to make you wonder if it was worth it. On the other hand, quite disappointing there was no real power tools in there.

  • There is more honest value than you would like to believe empty molded cases are worthless, hole saws can be used and the large ones are$$ even the gloves are$10. The 7k was probably a low retail value. At least it wasn’t a pallet of used broken tools would you rather have a million pennies or $1,000 in $100 bills the pennies would be 10k

  • 191 hole saws and you are complaining? Even at just $30 per hole saw that is $5,730. That is a low price too. Right now on HD website the 6 inch is $52 and change. One correction, as an electrician you got to be careful as most lights do not take a 6 inch hole saw, it is larger. The Klein one I use a lot is actually 6 3/8. A regular 6 inch isn’t too much. The gloves range from $10-$20 for most. Taking the low number of 10 with 75 pair that is $750. Portaband blades ranging from $22 to $36. Even only $22 a piece is $374. Those oscillating blades are expensive. 3 packs of the gold coated go for 30-$45. The value is there. It may not be an immediate turn around on your investment but it will certainly pay off eventually. Hole saws are a consumable, they get wore out and people need more. Price below market and yours will sell, at my math you’ll recoup your investment just in hole saws alone not counting any of the SDS max bits or anything else.

  • The legal loop hole they used on the manifest was the word “tools”… there is no word “power” before it. Since tools is a general word that encompasses ANY thing to aid in work, including hats, gloves and even pens – they did NOT defraud you in any way. Had they used the magic words of “power tools” on the manifest, you might have had a legal case… live and learn.

  • Those toilet augers are great, though without the drive adapter, it’s cheaper getting the one from General. Granted, when I worked in the field, I would use the manual handle unless I got wrapped into something stupid like a pair of sunglasses or “flushable” wipes. You’d be flabbergasted how often we pull sunglasses out of toilet traps

  • Dude if you sold the hole saws for $20 each (theyre worth 40) you would get back almost 4K. And the gloves for $5 thats another 400. You may have to do a little work for it but you got way more than 7K worth of stuff. You could donate it at face value and get at least $7000 off your taxes. You make it sound so bad, but it’s actually a good deal…

  • Man, this popped up in my feed and I saw the face and was like “I know this man”. Looked at the name and couldn’t help but laugh since I haven’t seen you since 6-6-06. Glad to see life is treating you well after the NFL. If you ever need CNC help or machine diagnostics or repairs feel free to shout out, I’ll be in the comments.

  • you can buy a new clam shell very cheap for the broken screw gun. I have gotten shells for roughly $12 and even got lucky and got a shell and the led ring on a dewalt gun for $0.03 total. I got 3 incase they made a mistake but a couple years later they are still that price. when my dewalt tools start looking rough I change the clam shells and even replace with all new stickers. I also change the bearings if they start making a different noise under use. which is also very cheap if you measure and don’t buy bearings from the manufacture

  • When my Milwaukee Super Sawsall crapped out in the 1st 6 months of use I took it to Berlands House of Tools for repair. They told me that they were bought and now produced by the same Chinese company that manufacturers other tools and I had just joined a group of professionals who have been screwed by this formerly American made company. That’s why I will never spend Milwaukee prices for the tools that I rely on. And it’s also why there’s pallets of returns for sale. By the way, I have a Ryobi drill that is still working after 3 decades and an old Milwaukee Sawsall that is 4 decades old unlike the Milwaukee right angle drill that failed the 2nd time I used it.

  • I think pallets are worse if the economy is good. They were actually OK back around 2008-2009. Everything’s a scam now anyways and the warehouse probably takes out the best stuff before it’s palletized anyways. Another comment said something about trying the in foreign countries and I would be interested in trying that if I had a business overseas somewhere. I think the US economy would have to go way way down for pallets to get good again and I don’t see that happening.

  • Wow, I mean the hole saws and bits are probably worth something. But actually go about the buisness of selling them? Would be a giant pain. Those bit kit boxes though, are pretty neat since they appear to be the newer packout-compatible ones so some people might want those just to organize their boxes. The rest… just let your employees take home anything they want, lol. It’s not like it’s all actually trash, it’s just not worth cataloging, pricing, listing, and shipping it all.

  • The only Milwaukee tool I’ll stand by is their utility knives. I’ve been working in/out of warehouses and shops for ten years and the Fastback utility knife is the only one I trust. It’s a damn good tool. I still have a couple of the ones I got from when I started working at 19. I’ve owned many of the 1501 over the years and carry a 1500 with me daily. The one I’m most heartbroken over is a 1500 I first started with that’s lost somewhere in my house. I once bought a combo pack of a 1501 and some blades where the blades were stolen by my coworkers and the knife was given to a older coworker who passed it onto a temp we were working with who promptly stole it and took it home, “lost it” and then quit the job. That coworker felt so bad she drove out of her way to a Lowe’s and bought me a new 1500 where I let my own dad borrow it and HE lost it. The only tool of theirs I hate is the 1520 folding knife with a stainless-steel blade. It’s the one that doesn’t have the little screwdriver bit holder. I hate ‘stainless steel’ in my knife blades, it holds an edge for shit and the detent sucks. the clip to hold the blade in place in use is too stiff and I’ve damn near almost lost a fingertip trying to close it. I gave it to my dad and returned to using a Kershaw Cryo folder until that got replaced by the 1500.

  • This guy got hosed paying $975.00 for a box of Amazon rejects. He might have a lawsuit for their claim of the box valued at 7K. Clearly when Amazon values a pallet of rejects, they are giving you the high retail with sales tax included. They should be forced by law to give the value based on second hand pricing without sale tax.

  • It looks like you could EASSSSSILY sell that stuff to turn a profit. Will take time on ebay/facebook marketplace, etc. Off the top of my head…..if you sold all of that stuff at 50-70% of MSRP, you’d bring in $3,000. Gloves = $7 pair x 75 = $525, hole saws $5 each = $955. 17 Porta Band blades = $170. The SDS bits will go fast. Yes…pain in ass to take the time, but you could get the Did you sell it? What did your ROI end up being?

  • Milwaukee makes a lot of great tools. Sadly, the blades they make are not among those great tools. You got so many hole saws because Milwaukee makes TERRIBLE hole saws. They don’t last worth a damn. People buy them, try them briefly and return them in disgust, and then go and buy a quality Diablo blade instead.

  • I’m always suspicious about claimed worth of these types of pallets or those “mystery boxes” – if they’re genuinely worth that amount, why on Earth would anyone sell it for such a massive loss then?? It doesn’t make any sense. You’d sell as close to the supposed worth as you can possibly get, if not a bit higher to get at least your money back or a slight profit. I also wouldn’t purchase something if the delivery fee is almost the same cost as the purchased item itself – that’s just wasted money cos you’re never gonna sell the lot (or individually) at a high enough price to get that delivery fee back (and you’ll probably have to pay another fee to send the items out again!)

  • Two things. First, one look at that auction, and I would just assume the employees grabbed the expensive tools out of it and threw it in their trunks to list on ebay. EDIT : I just spotted a bag that should have had a Sawzall in it, someone took the tool out of it and left the bag…… Secondly, I switched careers to be a software engineer and work indoors, but I used to work construction and we all loved Milwaukee… I still have all of my milwaukee tools and they all work, in my big pelican case. I once had a coworker borrow and drop my Milwaukee hammer drill off a 12 foot ladder. Nothing happened to it. Great tools.

  • We have an auction near my house in Michigan where people dump stuff on tables and people stand around and bid on an item but don’t touch it and then after the bidding is done they pick it out and then they start again. I GUARANTEE you would at least double your money there. No sorting, no organizing. Just literally dump the stuff out of totes onto the table and let people go to town. At $7 each that’s almost $1200 just in hole saws. I’m in southwest Michigan.

  • Just the hole saws at $10 each average make up your money. For electricians, having a 4, 5, and 6″ hole saw is very handy for downlights. I’d LOVE to have a 4, 5, and 6″ set just for my own home! I’ve been gathering LED downlights in those sizes at a bin store, but I haven’t lucked out on getting hole saws to install them yet, and I really don’t want to use a hand saw to install them.

  • Those 6 inch Milwaukee holesaws sell at Home Depot for almost 60 bucks and the 4 inch ones for around 35 so I don’t think you’ll have any problem at all getting $20-$25 for the 4 inch and 35 to 40 for the 6 inch. The smaller ones obviously are going to be less but even so every single one of them will be worth probably at least $10 on up. I guarantee you’ve got $1500 worth of wholesale is there no problem and probably if you market it right you got two or $3000 worth.

  • No one “destroyed” that fishtape, milwaukee just makes the dumbest fucking fishtapes in the world. That whole braided bullshit they do makes it so dirt and debris gets stuck on way easier, and it makes em too stiff to roll up easily. We used one for all of 2 days before we returned it😂 horrible product.

  • this is like the ultimate ‘disappointment pron’ News is basically ‘anger pron’ but there’s this new genre I would call: ‘disappointment niche’. it’s the complete opposite of ‘justice pron’, where instead of perusal a bully kick a ball that bounces back into their face you get to watch business owners make really piss poor financial decisions… lol

  • Milwaukee tools are overpriced mediocre junk. Their bus capacitors die after a few months of heavy use due to ripple current, many of the tools use scintered metal gears instead of cutt steel. In general they cost about 2X as much as better tools that are sold. They are not repairable either, all boards, motors etc. are hard soldered together and potted in either rtv or epoxy. BTW: that small impact driver, if it’s the hydraulic driver, the O ring will leak

  • Donate working tools to habitat for humanity. The tool bags, donate them to you local foster care / Social Services. A lot of kids that get removed from homes have to take a bag with them or an emergency situation have to leave without anything to put clothes in….most of the time its a garbage bag, and is very traumatic. A ‘Tool Bag’ for the little dudes can help in that situation.

  • Hi John. Lar here from Canada . I often wondered if buying a pallet would be a good gamble? You have answered my question. In regards to all your hole saws. If you have an extra 6″ and want to send it to one of your most dedicated viewers—AKA. Me. I would be honoured to have something from you that I could actually use and also display in my wood shop . I want to suggest one thing for you John, please don’t cut yourself down so much. If I had 1/10 th your knowledge and skill I would be a very rich and successful woodworker.

  • I used to know this dude that would buy pallets from big box stores for a couple of hundred dollars. Sometimes he would lucky and get real good stuff. This one time he bought a pallet from Target and got dozens of JBL charge speakers. He sold them for about $90.00 each and made a very good profit. Sometimes he would just break even.

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