When prices actually drop: a shopper’s calendar
Retail prices don’t move randomly. They move on a calendar — events, quarter ends, model refreshes — and on algorithms that reprice thousands of items a day with no banner announcing it. If you know the rhythm, "should I wait for a sale?" stops being a coin flip.
The loud drops
- ·Placeholder: Prime Day(s) — typical months, which categories genuinely drop.
- ·Placeholder: Black Friday / Cyber Monday — what’s actually cheapest, what’s inflated-then-discounted.
- ·Placeholder: back-to-school, Labor Day, post-holiday clearance windows.
The quiet drops
Placeholder: algorithmic repricing — how often large retailers change prices per day, why electronics and home goods swing hardest, and the model-refresh cycles (TVs in spring, headphones before new releases) that sink last-gen prices.
The good news: you don’t have to time it
Here’s the part the buying guides miss: if the price drops within your return window, buying "too early" costs you nothing — the difference is claimable. The calendar matters much less once something is watching your orders. Buy when you need the thing; let the watcher handle the regret.