Do you promote sponsored or paid deals?
No. The clearance feed comes from retailer pricing data, not from advertisers. Links on RebelSavings are affiliate links, so we may earn a commission if you buy something — but affiliate status doesn't bump anything up in the feed. The scanner decides what shows up. We'd rather tell you than hide it.
How does Rebel Radar find deals?
The scanner pulls live pricing directly from Home Depot, Lowe's, Walmart, Walgreens, and Tractor Supply at the individual store level. When a product hits clearance pricing — typically 35–99% off — it shows up in the feed. No manual posts, no community tips needed.
Is it really free? What's the catch?
Yes, free. No subscription, no paywall, no hidden premium tier. Free accounts are optional; sign in with an email if you want price drop alerts and saved deals synced between devices. The site runs on display ads and affiliate links on product pages, so you pay nothing extra and ad revenue doesn't influence what surfaces in the feed.
How is this different from BrickSeek?
BrickSeek locks most useful features behind a paid subscription and is built primarily for inventory lookup. RebelSavings is free, built specifically for clearance detection, and shows store-level pricing on a radius map around your ZIP — so you can see exactly which Home Depot, Lowe's, or Walmart near you has the item on the shelf.
Why do some retailers not require a ZIP code?
Walmart and Tractor Supply use national clearance pricing — the deal is the same at every store. Home Depot, Lowe's, and Walgreens set clearance prices store by store, so your ZIP is what lets us show you what's actually on the shelf at stores near you.
How current is the data?
The scanner runs continuously. New clearance markdowns usually show up in the feed within an hour of a retailer updating their price — usually hours before the deal gets posted to Slickdeals, Reddit, or a Facebook deal group.
Are these deals available online too?
Most clearance on RebelSavings is in-store only. Retailers like Home Depot and Lowe's mark items down at the store level, and those prices rarely match what's shown online. It's worth calling your specific local store or checking inventory before making the drive.
What is hidden clearance?
Hidden clearance means items that have been marked down at the store level but aren't advertised in weekly ads, email blasts, or the retailer's homepage. At Home Depot and Lowe's, items often drop in stages — 30% off, then 50%, then 75% — without any public promotion. Most shoppers never see these prices unless they scan the barcode in-store. RebelSavings catches those markdowns in the retailer's pricing feed and puts them in one searchable list.
How do I find hidden clearance at Home Depot?
Hidden clearance at Home Depot is usually identified by the last digit of the price tag — prices ending in $.06 or $.03 typically signal that an item has been marked down below the advertised clearance price. The traditional way to find these is to walk the aisles and scan individual barcodes with the Home Depot app. RebelSavings pulls the same store-level pricing data and puts every hidden markdown in one searchable list, filtered by your ZIP, so you can see what's on clearance at nearby stores without driving there first.