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Book It: How to Find Cheaper Textbooks

Book It: How to Find Cheaper Textbooks

Chris Diehl

June 04, 2008

The price of textbooks has risen at twice the rate of inflation (.pdf) over the last 20 years according to the Government Accountability Office. Even used books don’t soften the blow. What’s a student with a bruised bank account to do?

Net Yourself a Used Textbook

Amazon, Abebooks and eBay are familiar resources. Other Web sites (like Campusi) list available titles from many different used book sellers, organized by price. Before you buy online:

  • Check the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) to verify you’re getting the book you want.
  • Factor in shipping time and cost. Don’t fall behind because your book got lost in the mail.
  • Wait until the end of the semester. Lower demand means more favorable availability and price. Don’t know what books will be on the syllabus? Ask your professor.


Internet Alternatives

Jason Turgeon, a senior at Northeastern University, publishes Textbook Revolution, a site that links to academic resources, information and ideas that appear in most textbooks. He started the site because he grew tired of paying extra for bundled CD-ROMs he never used. Many of the free sites he links to offer the same multimedia benefits that you might pay for on a CD-ROM. “I have never once used a bundled CD-ROM,” Turgeon says. “Through being creative, I managed to cut my book costs to $30 last semester.”

SwapSimple allows members to trade books for a nominal cost. “Going through the process of selling my books, getting nothing in return, and then watching them sell that same book to the kid behind me in line for retail price, I knew something needed to be done,” says Elliot Hirsch, one of the founders of SwapSimple. Students trade textbooks and other items at essentially the cost of shipping. “You really can get virtually any book you want for just around $3.50, $4,” he says.

Some campuses create their own marketplace. Hannah Love will be a junior next fall at the University of Kansas. She helps organize a student-run online book exchange at KU. “I saw there was a need on campus and started getting involved in the campaign,” she says. Students post the books they want to buy or sell, then meet and set a price. If your school doesn’t have a formal exchange program, check your school’s online bulletins boards for opportunities.


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    NichlavosA

    about 1 month ago

    Great article and useful information. Yes it is true many students do not know where to find the cheapest books.
    Free textbook price comparison by http://www.affordtextbooks.com compares prices instantly across 50 plus website to find cheapest deals.

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    sehgalamit

    11 months ago

    It totally depends whether to rent our buy used college textbooks, as the students need to consider the options of the buyback prices also of the textbooks. because sometimes, buying used textbooks is cheaper as compare to renting, because the buyback offer for that textbook is high. So a proper search should be done before final deciding
    college textbooks - www.bookase.com

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    MichelleC237

    over 1 year ago

    dont know if all pages come, so emailed this also

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    MichelleC237

    over 1 year ago

    thought this article with sites may be useful in the futere

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    bjones_y

    over 1 year ago

    eBooks may be part of the answer to lower prices, rental textbooks has helped but many time you can buy a used textbook and then resell it for a total cost less than renting. The best is to use a good price comparison service that reveals new, used, ebook and rental prices. www.cheap-textbooks.com does this as well as providing buyback quotes.

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    savannah88

    over 1 year ago

    Hi, thanks for the info ill check them out, i go to Cheapest Textbooks, you should check them out i use them every year for school they are a great place to buy and sell used textbooks online

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    VictoriaC254

    almost 2 years ago

    This is VERY helpful!

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    jamelahg

    about 2 years ago

    barnes and nobles is good amazon is good also.. make sure you attend class the first day then see if you really need the books. just a heads up.

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    aprilsoles

    about 2 years ago

    Don't want to buy a book that is not exact when your teacher tells you your homework is over certain pages. Or they will ask you to write a paper or a response or a case study that the book from overseas doesn't have. Is not a good idea to get books if they are not exactly like the one the professor expects for class. I've ran into that problem in the past. Got the same book it was just a different volume (Year before) book and it was a waste of my money because I had to look all through the book just to find the information she was talking about and then it didn't have all the subjects in it that she was teaching in the class.

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    epf1991

    about 2 years ago

    I had great luck with Chegg. I saved $400 on textbooks as an incoming freshman! The books were in great shape, shipped fast and included the CDs. I advise people to stop buying textbooks from the bookstores and rent them instead! Save an extra 5% with promo code CC101071. Use the same code and get an extra $5.00 when selling your old used textbooks.

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    BryceW83

    over 2 years ago

    Chegg.com for the win.

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    fctoma

    over 2 years ago

    I've used eskoob before, nice site, reverted to beta but they usually have a great selection and some of the lowest prices for selling or buying textbooks online

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    MyrnaA3

    over 2 years ago

    Rent your textbooks from Chegg.com or Bookrenter.com....it is so much cheaper!

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    ChantellC6

    over 2 years ago

    Addall.com is another great site that compares book prices of various internet stores. I have found that Amazon Used in consistently in the top 3 of lowest priced books.

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    BrianW1144

    over 2 years ago

    Dealoz.com is a Great online price comparison site(free). Half.com,Amazon, Abebooks and alot others are there.