I built a site that shows Amazon Warehouse deals by discount. Their home improvement sections have the best deals by far because no one buys from them so they get automatically discounted over time.
This tool is awesome man I’ll use it often!
More on reddit.comAmazon Prime Day - Tool Deals - Power Tool Forum – Tools in Action
I Analysed Amazon’s Prime Day “Deals” And Jeff Is Still Pulling the Same Old Moves 💀
Lets hear about those killer prime deals you scored on today. What did you save big bucks on?
How do I find the best Amazon deals right now?
Check the "Today's Deals" page and sort by "Discount: High to Low" to see the biggest markdowns first. Look for Lightning Deals with countdown timers — these offer the steepest discounts but for limited time periods. Prime members get 30-minute early access to these flash sales.
How do digital coupons work on Amazon?
Look for "Clip" buttons on product pages and click them before adding items to your cart. These digital coupons automatically apply at checkout and can often be combined with existing sale prices for extra savings.
Is Amazon Prime worth it for saving money?
Prime pays for itself through shipping alone if you order regularly, but the real savings come from exclusive member discounts, early deal access, 10% off at Whole Foods, and gas station savings. Students get 6 months free plus 50% off the regular price.
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Link to the site: https://dealforager.com
Their home improvement and kitchen sections have some of the best deals. I think it's because most people prefer to buy those items from other places. However, if you're willing to take some risks (pretty low because you can always return easily), then you can get a lot of really nice stuff over 50% off from Amazon Warehouse.
There's hundreds of thousands of items so make sure to search for what you want. Or use the category filters to browse categories that interest you. Also, when searching make sure to use as few words as you need for the item you're looking for. This is because my site searches for each word to be present in the titles. For example, "men's 10" will return much more results than "men's size 10 shoe". Also, certain words like "table" are contained in many other words like "adjustTable". In those cases, it's better to quote the word when searching to make sure it searched for the exact word and not words containing that word. I'm working on improving this.
This is a link to the site with those categories selected (My site also has many other categories, but these are the ones relevant to this subreddit):
https://dealforager.com/deals?cat=0000000000100000010000
Note: This also works for other countries including Canada, UK, and Germany. The country selector is on the top right.
Edit: Please share it with your friends and family. It also has deals for many other categories. The only way I can keep this site running is if I get enough traffic because the infrastructure costs are high. I also have a subreddit for the site: r/dealforager
After Prime Day ended, I became curious because many of the “deals” I saw didn’t seem like actual discounts. I tracked a few hundred listings over the last 30 days using Keepa and DealSeek, and the results were eye-opening.
So I found out:
Around 43% of the “limited-time deals” were either the same price or higher than they were 1–2 weeks before Prime Day.
Another 30% had inflated MSRPs, meaning Amazon or the seller raised the “was” price right before the sale to make the discount appear larger.
The only genuinely good deals were hidden listings that featured promo codes or coupon checkboxes that didn’t show up in search results.
In essence, most of Prime Day was a cleverly packaged illusion, small discounts bolstered by extensive marketing.
So next time you shop on Amazon, do a quick check with DealSeek or Keepa before hitting “Buy Now.” Many of the “deals” disappear once you look at the data.
Clearly, Jeff isn’t losing any sleep over whether you’re getting a fair deal.