How to send an item from Amazon as a gift so people know who sent it
- If you send a gift to someone from Amazon, you have to mark it as a gift. Otherwise, the recipient won't know who it's from.
- Here's how to mark an item as a gift on Amazon so the recipient knows who sent it, and who to thank.
In this article
- AMZN
My son turned one earlier this month. We received a lot of presents from friends and family through Amazon. But we aren't sure where to send some of the thank you cards.
If you buy an item from Amazon and have it shipped somewhere else, it'll just arrive in a box without any sort of note for the recipient about who sent it. Amazon knows you have a record of the purchase through its website. It makes sense most of the time. But, if you're sending a gift, you need to mark it as a gift before you finish the purchase.
When you do that, Amazon will ship the item with a gift receipt and a note that shows who bought the item. And then people like me will know who to thank. [Thank you for the gifts, by the way.]
How to send items as gifts on Amazon so people know who sent it
- Find an item you want to buy and add it to your Amazon cart.
- On the cart subtotal screen that opens next, click the small checkbox that says "This order contains a gift."
- Click proceed to checkout.
- You'll see a screen that shows here option to customize a message -- it's autopopulated with "Hi, Enjoy your gift!" and a note who it's from.
- Make sure the "gift receipt" box is checked if you want the recipient to have the option to return or exchange it. Prices are hidden.
- You can include an optional gift bag for an added fee. In this example, my fee is about $5.
- Click "Save gift options."
- Select your payment method and continue checkout as normal.
That's it! Now, the recipient of your gift will know who sent it.
Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.
In this article
- AMZN
- 1Omicron Covid variant in at least 15 states and cases are likely to rise, CDC chief says
- 2Sexual misconduct allegation against Chris Cuomo led to his firing from CNN, attorney says
- 3Medicare won't let this 68-year-old cancer patient enroll in Part B. It's costing her thousands
- 4This 24-year-old artist has made over $300,000 in 10 months selling NFTs
- 5Dow futures jump 240 points despite recent tech stock selling, bitcoin's weekend rout