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Packaging Changes: Why a Penny Item Can Look Just Like a Full-Price One

One of the most common reasons an item drops to a penny has nothing to do with the product being unpopular — it's a packaging or formula change. When a manufacturer refreshes a product, the updated version usually gets a brand-new item number, and the old version is discontinued and marked to $0.01 to clear it out. The catch: the old (penny) and new (full-price) versions can sit side by side looking almost identical.

By · Last updated 2026-06-26.

Why a refresh creates a penny

Retail systems track products by item number (SKU/UPC), not by how they look. When a brand changes a label, tweaks a recipe, resizes a package, updates a count, or even just refreshes artwork, the product typically gets a new number in the system. The store then phases out the old number — discontinuing it and, at these chains, dropping it to a penny as an internal "pull and remove" flag. So a penny here isn't a judgment about the product; it's the old version being retired in favor of the new one.

The trap: it looks like a match but rings up full price

Because the change is often cosmetic, the new full-price version and the old penny version can look nearly the same on the shelf. Shoppers grab what looks like their penny match, get to the register, and it rings up at full price — because it's the new item number. Or the reverse: the unassuming older one is the penny. The picture and the front of the package can't be trusted.

How to tell them apart

Look for the tells of a refresh: a slightly different size or count, changed or "new look" label wording, updated artwork, a different scent/flavor name, or a different barcode. Above all, match the exact item number shown on the Penny Tree card and scan it in store. The register, reading that specific SKU, is the only thing that settles whether it's a penny. See our scanner & SKU-matching guide for the full how-to.

Does this happen at all three stores?

Yes. The packaging-change trigger is the same mechanism at Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, and Dollar General (and at big-box stores too). What differs is whether each chain will actually sell you the penny — see which dollar store sells pennies.

FAQ

Why does the penny item look the same as the full-price one?

Because a penny is often triggered by a packaging or formula change. The updated product gets a new item number and the old one is discontinued and pennied, so the two can look nearly identical. Match the exact item number and scan it to be sure.

How do I avoid grabbing the wrong (full-price) version?

Don't go by the picture or package front. Check for a different size, count, label wording, artwork, or barcode, and match the exact item number on your list. Then scan it in store — only the register confirms the penny.

Does a new barcode mean it won't penny?

Often, yes — a new barcode usually means a new item number (the refreshed version), which is typically full price. The pennied version is the old number. Scan both if you're unsure.

Browse the live penny database →

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