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ToolGuyd > Power Tools > Cordless > What’s up With Dewalt’s 2x 5.0Ah Battery Pack Pricing?

What’s up With Dewalt’s 2x 5.0Ah Battery Pack Pricing?

Sep 21, 2015 Stuart 18 Comments

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Dewalt 20V Max 5Ah Battery 2-Pack

In a recent deal post, I discussed a new Dewalt 20V Max 5Ah plus free bare tool promo that’s running over at Home Depot.

Bill, in a comment, asked about why the price on Dewalt’s 20V Max 5Ah 2-pack increased in price over at Amazon. Here’s the Amazon product page, where the price is currently $199.

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Update: The price dropped back down to $159 today.

$199 doesn’t seem so bad when you consider that a single battery retails for $139 at Amazon and other authorized dealers. One Amazon seller has them for $119 each, but it’s unclear as to why their price is lower than the higher typical retail price.

Bill writes:

Can you or anyone tell me why, just two months ago, you could by a set of two of these 5.0Ah batteries for $149 on Amazon and other sites?

The set of two is now $199, an overnight increase of 33%, and I have not seen a similar price jump with other Dewalt batteries or other brands for that matter during this same period.

I can’t tell you why the price increase happened, but I can share some of my best guesses.

To start off, let me ask you this – did the price increase or did a promo price end? Although the result is the same, the context is important here. As far as I can tell, $199 is the official suggested retail price, as that’s how much authorized dealers are currently selling it for.

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I do remember seeing lower prices for the double pack of 5Ah batteries. So why the increase?

Maybe the manufacturing costs went up. Let’s say that a raw material used in the manufacturing of a battery cell went up in price. The supplier has to charge more to the battery manufacturer. The battery manufacturer then increases the price that Dewalt has to pay. Dewalt increases the wholesale price of their battery pack, and then Amazon does the same.

Don’t forget that each of these 5Ah battery packs holds 10 Li-ion battery cells.

But I don’t think this is the case.

The price might be lower in some seasons and higher in others. Maybe demand is high now and supply low, and so ending promo pricing is Dewalt’s way of stabilizing things.

Why wouldn’t Dewalt want to sell out now? The holidays are coming up. Someone that buys a 2-pack of batteries in November or December might spend more on other Dewalt tools and accessories, than if they were to buy the batteries now.

Maybe Dewalt wants to make their tool kits look more attractive, although there aren’t very many “P2” kits that come with (2) 5.0Ah Li-ion battery packs. Or maybe there’s a drop in supply because they’re shipping out a higher number of such tool kits to suppliers in anticipation of higher holiday sales.

Don’t get me wrong, it sucks when things like this happen, especially when you need or want to buy the product.

Why is the price higher now? To answer that, we should also ask: why was the price lower before?

I’m sure Dewalt and their dealer network have good reasons for ending (or maybe halting) a long-running promo and increasing the price on the 2-battery kit. That won’t make any end-users happy, but if you need these batteries now, the $199 price is still better than buying 2 at $119-$139 each.

Back in July, I reviewed my Dell 34-inch curved computer monitor. It launched at $1100-1200 or so, and I bought it at a steal – $992 plus tax. Then, when I wrote the review, it had dropped to $810. I thought it was a great price, and part of the reason I wrote about it was because doing so made me feel better about spending more.

The price of the monitor went back up for a while. When I checked just now, the price was $756.98. While a bit unhappy that I paid so much more, I did get more than 6 months of use.

So why the lower price now? Presumably because there’s somewhat lower demand and greater supply. Some of the manufacturing equipment, if any new specialty machinery was required, is more paid off now with more units than when the monitor initially launched. That could lead to lower costs.

But the price might jump back up. Power tool prices and promotions are usually more predictable than technology products, but that doesn’t make them immune from serious pricing fluctuations.

If you need Dewalt 20V Max 5Ah batteries now, and can handle the higher price, go ahead and buy them. If the price drops substantially within 30 days, buy a new pack and return the higher-priced one. Or you can request a price adjustment, which Amazon customer service reps don’t seem to like doing these days.

Amazon wouldn’t give me a price adjustment on something I once bought right before a $50 price drop, but they said I could return it. You have to eat the return shipping, which is less that you will pay if you use an Amazon-paid shipping label. They’ll then deduct the cost from your refund. Return the new-in-box batteries to avoid having to pay a restocking fee. You *probably* (check the return policy or ask them yourself to be sure) won’t have to pay restocking fee.

Or… add it to your cart or wishlist and check back in a couple of weeks to see if the price changed at all.

What do you think – is there another possible explanation?

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18 Comments

  1. Doresoom

    Sep 21, 2015

    This price jump wouldn’t have anything to do with that new 20V Max battery to 18V tool adapter, now would it?

    *slowly puts on tinfoil hat*

    Reply
    • Stuart

      Sep 21, 2015

      I don’t think so.

      It seems to me that Dewalt wants users to pair the adapter (reminder: https://14cyiuhvcgv.com/dewalt-20v-max-18v-battery-adapter/%3C/a%3E%29 with compact 2.0Ah battery packs.

      I think that the timing is coincidental.

      Reply
  2. fred

    Sep 21, 2015

    Why?

    The old quip says: “Y (why) is crooked letter that can’t be straightened out”

    On a more serious note – your speculations point out that the price of an item can reflect many things – with only one of them being cost.

    Reply
  3. Rich

    Sep 21, 2015

    Does it really matter, MILWAUKEE has HD 9.0ah battery coming out, throw out the yellow black and deckers and buy some power. The Fuel line is more powerful than being plugged in to a wall 99 percent of the time!

    Reply
    • Chris

      Sep 21, 2015

      I’ll stick to the yellow black and deckers, at least it’s a quality tool

      Reply
    • Bill

      Sep 21, 2015

      Rich, I agree with you but I pulled the trigger on my Dewalt 20v tools before the Fuel line was complete and truthfully they suit my needs just fine as do my 12v Dewalt tools. But yes, it is clear that Milwaukee has taken the edge from Dewalt and it seems that Dewalt is content with that.

      Reply
  4. Derek

    Sep 21, 2015

    You can set a price alert on camelcamelcamel.com and it will email you when a product hits the number you set.

    Reply
  5. adam

    Sep 21, 2015

    Here is the link to the past year of prices for the 2-pack on amazon. The lowest it ever sold for was $139, which was for just about all of last December. Maybe there was a promotion going on then, or just competing with the brick & mortar stores that had the batteries on special because of X-mas.

    http://camelcamelcamel.com/DEWALT-DCB205-2-Lithium-Battery-2-Pack/product/B00KQU1ENG

    Reply
  6. Robbie Stanford

    Sep 21, 2015

    You can’t use Amazon’s price as an example of a manafactures current price, when you search for a product on Amazon your search results only show one result And Amazon decides what seller to show you once that seller’s supply runs out then they promote another supplier there prices can be very different, also Amazon greatly varies the price of the products they sell.

    If the price of these batteries changed at Lowes or Home Depot I could understand. But at Amazon prices are constantly changing.

    Reply
  7. Wes

    Sep 21, 2015

    Most likely, there was a quarterly promo that allowed Amazon (and other dealers) to buy them either at a lower price or a 10 and 1 discount and then they would be allowed to run a lower MAP during that promotional period. Now the promo is probably over and the MAP went back up to $199… that’s my guess

    Reply
  8. logan

    Sep 21, 2015

    There was a local supplier in Central California selling the 5.0 batteries for $60 each last month. I think they went up to $75 or $90 though. It never hurts to check local businesses!

    Reply
    • logan

      Sep 21, 2015

      https://secure.ramweldingsupply.com/products-view.mcic?s=4746

      They are 89.99 on this site

      Reply
  9. Mike

    Sep 21, 2015

    Rich keep your Chinese owned Milwaukee I’ll stick with the American owned and now made in the USA Dewalt which are better made and fyi black and decker has owned Dewalt since 1960

    Reply
  10. conan

    Sep 21, 2015

    I bought 2 for around 140 and singles for around 74 a month ago from ebay.

    Reply
  11. Brian

    Sep 22, 2015

    I’ve seen dissembled Dewalt batteries and they were Sanyo 3.7v cells. Sanyo was bought by Panasonic in early 2011 specifically for their batteries. Panasonic later sold off other Sanyo assets to Chinese companies. I’m wondering if Panasonic, who is no longer manufacturing plasma TVs(as of 9 months ago) and doesn’t make the panels in their LED TVs(LG panels), is raising the cost of their batteries/cells to boost profits…after all, they can do it because they make the BEST rechargeable batteries on the market. This also begs the question if B&D and PC use the same Panasonic/Sanyo cells or if they’re Samsung(Milwaukee) or another make. It could be worth watching pricing across all of the battery lines and researching to figure out what cells are in what batteries. This could all be rubbish speculation and I could be waaaaay off but it’s just food for thought…Or it could be aliens.

    Reply
  12. Brandon

    Sep 22, 2015

    Raise the price now, and then the Black Friday/Christmas price drop looks like a better deal.

    Reply
  13. conan

    Sep 22, 2015

    prices always go up and down at amazon and other such places. Their prices are high so they do not sell much. Then they need to move product and get more reasonable on prices. Then they go back up later. Up and down, always.

    Reply
  14. Stuart

    Oct 1, 2015

    The price dropped back down to $159 today.

    Reply

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