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Surprise! Best Buy prices often on par with Amazon

Surprise! Best Buy prices often on par with Amazon

Best Buy closed the price gap on electronics and tech gadgets during the past years, and its in-store prices are often just as low — sometimes lower — than Amazon.com, according to new research.

It's not often that a brick-and-mortar retailer can match, let alone beat, Amazon.com's online prices. Best Buy, however, is doing just that, according to a Wall Street analyst's comparison of more than four dozen items sold by both stores.

Once floundering, Best Buy has since upped its game by hiring more knowledgeable sales people, building brand-specific stores within stores, and featuring hot new products, including the Apple Watch. Even so, many consumers still assume Amazon offers better prices than electronics stores, such as Best Buy. Honestly, that's been mostly true.

But David Magee, who follows Best Buy for SunTrust Robinson Humphrey, a corporate and investment bank, put together a shopping basket of common items, including washers and dryers, TVs, computers and other accessories sold by both Amazon and Best Buy. The result: Magee and his team found that on average there was little or no difference in price. "In the past, we've seen a gradual tightening of the spread between the two retailers. This time, the basket totals were essentially at parity," he wrote in a SunTrust research note.

For example, a 60-inch Sony TV was listed for $899.99 at Best Buy, and it was just $2 cheaper at Amazon, not including tax or shipping charges, according to Magee. A 23-inch IPS Dell monitor cost $129.99 at Best Buy and $149.99 at Amazon, but Amazon did offer a Samsung Galaxy Tab tablet for $20 less than Best Buy. The TV accessories the team compared tended to be cheaper at Amazon, but Best Buy offered lower prices on camera accessories.

Shipping, convenience and salespeople also factor in

It's worth noting that Amazon Prime customers, who pay $99 a year, are eligible for "free" shipping, while Best Buy only offers free shipping on selected items.

Earlier this week, I wrote about my (good) experience buying a Lenovo G50 laptop at Best Buy. At the time, the PC was on sale for $249, but as of today it costs $309. The same configuration is listed for $313 on Amazon. And when I looked at external hard drives to back up the new PC, both stores offered a wide range of products at similar prices.

I did a quick comparison of a MacBook Pro with Retina display, 8GB of memory and a 128GB solid-state hard drive; it costs $1,235 on Best Buy and $1,299 at Amazon, with free shipping.

Smart shoppers consider more than price, of course. It's hard to beat the convenience of shopping online, though Best Buy and lots of other traditional retailers also have websites that offer many, if not all, of the products you'll find on their shelves.

There's also something to be said for walking into a real store and getting your hands on a product before you buy it. If the store has informed, intelligent salespeople, that's a big plus, as well.

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