People Are Sharing The Everyday Things They Believe Has Become WAY, WAY, WAY Too Expensive

by · BuzzFeed

Since everything feels wildly overpriced lately, Reddit user u/just_some_troglodyte asked: "What is horribly overpriced?" and a lot of people had thoughts on the matter. Here's what they had to say below:

1. "I swear that it would be cheaper to melt some platinum and pour it into a printer cartridge than to buy some regular printer ink."

Wittayayut / Getty Images

u/upvoter222

"That's why you need to buy an Epson EcoTank. The ink lasts through literally thousands of pages. I bought one in March 2020, went all the way through school and didn't buy ink again until January 2022. Plus, when you do buy the ink, all four bottles are, like, $50."

u/Desperate4Mountains

2. "Funerals."

u/Ok-Mushroom-7292

"Mortician here. Go to a privately owned family mortuary. They actually give a shit most of the time about what families want and are generally more flexible than corporate mortuaries. Private mortuaries rely on returning families so they have to do a good job to survive. 

NEVER go to an SCI location. I worked for that company for two years too long, and it's astounding how little they cared about people. They had NO issue nickel and diming everyone while doing the bare minimum if that. They regularly buried people without their belongings and never told the families. They had numerous occasions where the body was not ready for a funeral, bodies were used as doorstops, people were put in the wrong urns, etc. They do not care about you and are no better than car salespeople. Family-run mortuaries do what they do because they care."

u/GhoulishlyGrim

3. "Groceries."

Tanja Ivanova / Getty Images

u/BGoodOswaldo

"It is so stupidly expensive to buy groceries right now. Even if I just need a small list, specifically for the dinner I’m making that evening, it’s always $50–$75. I feel like in the past few years, groceries have skyrocketed."

u/FreshHotPoop

4. "Insulin."

u/Delicious-Let8429

"In America..."

u/sliderfish

5. "Airport food."

Aitor Diago / Getty Images

u/No-Reputation-4869

"I travel a lot for work. I leave the house at least 2 1/2 hours prior to my flight just to get food before going to the airport. Usually, like a Subway footlong or something that fills me up for half the day. Also, bring your own water bottle."

u/PillCosby_87

6. "The housing market."

u/ClickWorthy69420

7. "Airbnbs are through the roof. I used to get great deals for under $100 for nice places. Now, it's impossible to find something decent under $200."

Jana Murr / Getty Images

u/bobbywise82594

"When I was a lowly unpaid government intern in 2017 in another state, I really wanted to explore. I managed to find so many $20–$25 Airbnbs. They were rooms in people's actual houses or their basements, and so many of them made me dinner. Now, it's $130 a night for a literal shed in Kansas and another $150 for a bullshit cleaning fee. No thanks, I'll sleep in my fucking car."

u/basilobs

8. "US healthcare."

u/grptrt

"Yes! Even with insurance, I have a bill for my child’s birth at around $30,000. My OB didn’t even pick up the phone when I went into labor. Nor did her backup. I had to get an emergency C-section, so I was charged accordingly."

u/Tiny_Chicken1396

9. "Anything for weddings. If you say 'wedding' to any vendor or business, the prices go way up. It's ridiculous."

Dmytro Duda / Getty Images/iStockphoto

u/railmanmatt

"Me and my fiancé are trying to plan a cheap wedding. Yeah, we are going with the eloping idea right now."

u/bryceisaskategod

10. "Subscription plans."

u/SkyAir457

"Five dollars per month doesn't sound so bad, until there are 10 of those you have to use, and every one of them has an 'ultra-premium' tier for 10 dollars that has all of the feature things you actually care about."

u/_fatherfucker69

11. "Legos."

Ethamphoto / Getty Images

u/Diabeato11

"When I was little, I used to be really excited to earn money and then be able to buy all the Legos I wanted. It didn't work out, of course."

u/Guillotine_Shrimp

12. "A bean burrito plus sour cream — it now costs $3.38. I’m good, Taco Bell. Those were, like, $.79."

u/Dystopian_Divisions

"Taco Bell has really gone up. I swear my old order used to run around $10, now it’s $20."

u/LastTangoInParis69

13. "Concert tickets."

Edwin Tan / Getty Images

u/SoleParadigm

"Ticketmaster gave me a $75 service fee. Why does it cost $75 for you to send me a digital ticket when these venues are probably paying them to sell their tickets anyway?"

u/waytoogay247

14. "Just saw Oppenheimer at 11:00 a.m. on a Sunday. $43 with popcorn and soda."

u/Agnostickamel

"This is why I don’t go to the movies. And I have four kids. My three girls want to see the Barbie movie, but I know it would cost a month’s worth of rent to take them all."

u/PollutionMany4369

15. "Women's self-care/cosmetic products. It's the same exact stuff as men's just with a different smell, but it costs SO much more. Don't believe me, read the ingredients."

Voronchuk Daria / Getty Images

u/GiftInteresting8482

16. "Existing as a single adult."

u/Relative-Zebra-3414

"Fucking 100%. Where I live, if I would’ve had a partner with a median salary, we could spend almost half as much per person on housing and get a nicer apartment! Combine that with everything costing less when you buy in bulk, and bachelor life starts to look not too appealing."

u/Eritar

17. "I think the real question is what isn’t horribly overpriced nowadays."

Burke / Getty Images

u/Choice_Bid_7941

"Costco hotdog and infinite drink combo."

u/Burger_Gamer

Is there a particular thing that you believe is incredibly overpriced? If so, tell us what it is and why in the comments below.