Cost Of Free Returns Explainer
The $6.10 per return, the 6.2% rate, and the 38 cents on every order with the arithmetic printed.
The $6.10 per return, the 6.2% rate, and the 38 cents on every order with the arithmetic printed.
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Cost of Free Returns Explainer publishes the bill in three stat tiles: $6.10 per return (carriage both ways, inspection minutes), 6.2% of orders that come back, and the $0.38 it adds to every product sold. The arithmetic is printed in a monospace rule beneath the tiles: “$6.10 per return x 6.2% of orders = $0.378, call it 38 cents on everything we sell.” A second paragraph defends the choice, naming what a return fee actually buys: keep it anyway regret, bags that are almost right, kept because sending them back costs money, owned by people who quietly never come back.
Figures live in one array. The 6.2% figure echoes the returns page directly, the cross reference is the transparency the block is designed to prove.
Reach for this block on the pricing transparency page or linked from the free returns policy. The threshold line (revisit at 8%, in public, before anything changes at checkout) must be a real commitment or the block overreaches.
A natural flow around it on an Ecommerce Pro page:
Before
After
One strong use is the 38 cents on every order. Other cost transparency variants:
Tip: the monospace arithmetic line is the block at its most honest; a number without the working shown is just a claim.