The Best Websites for Finding Electronics Deals in 2026
There are a million "deal" websites out there, and most of them are trash. They either scrape outdated prices, show fake discounts, or bury everything in ads. Here are the ones we actually think are useful โ including when to use each one.
For Price Comparison
Dealblazers (that's us) โ We aggregate deals from Newegg, Amazon, Best Buy, and other major retailers and let you compare prices side-by-side. We also track price history so you can see if a "sale" is actually a good price or just the normal price with a red tag on it. We're biased, obviously, but we built this because we wanted it for ourselves.
Google Shopping โ Honestly still useful for a quick price check. It pulls from a ton of retailers and the price range display gives you a fast read on whether what you're seeing is competitive. The downside is it doesn't track history and it includes a lot of marketplace sellers with questionable reliability.
CamelCamelCamel โ Amazon-only, but solid for what it does. The price history charts are detailed and you can set alerts. If you only shop on Amazon, this is worth bookmarking.
For Flash Deals and Lightning Sales
Slickdeals โ The community aspect is what makes this one work. Deals get upvoted or downvoted, and the comments usually tell you within minutes whether something is legit or overpriced. Can be overwhelming though โ there's a LOT of noise.
r/buildapcsales โ If you're building a PC, this subreddit is essential. The community is knowledgeable and will call out bad deals immediately. Great for GPUs, SSDs, RAM, and monitors.
For Coupons and Promo Codes
Most coupon sites are full of expired or fake codes, so we'll keep this short. RetailMeNot still works sometimes, but set your expectations low. Honey (browser extension) is convenient but rarely finds codes that save more than a few bucks.
Honestly, the best coupons come directly from the store โ sign up for email lists from Best Buy, Newegg, and Amazon. The first-purchase discounts and member-exclusive coupons are usually better than anything on a coupon aggregator.
For Used and Refurbished
eBay is still the king for used electronics, especially for older/discontinued items. Their buyer protection has gotten better over the years.
Amazon Renewed is fine for common items like headphones and tablets. Returns are easy.
Dell Outlet and Apple Refurbished are the best for their respective brands. Manufacturer warranty included.
What We'd Skip
Any site that requires you to sign up before seeing prices. If they won't show you the deal, it's probably not a great deal.
Sites that only show Amazon results. Amazon has competitive prices, but they're not always the cheapest. A good deal site should compare across multiple stores.
"Deal of the day" sites with countdown timers. The urgency is almost always manufactured. The same deal will be back next week.
The Honest Truth
No single site catches every deal. The people who consistently find the best prices usually check 2-3 sources, know the realistic price range for what they want, and aren't afraid to wait a week or two.
Or they just bookmark a deal site and check in every few days. That works too.