Loopholes—like holes in Swiss cheese, they’re everywhere, and they’re giving some people real-life cheat codes that border on dishonesty and even stealing. But you need to be very perceptive and to have the cunning of a Slytherin to notice and use them to your advantage.
Redditor SterlingBoardman asked their fellow internet users to share what loopholes they’d exploited for years before someone found out. Some of these are devilishly delightful and we’re not sure if we should be angry or impressed. Check them out, dear Pandas, and give the ones that impressed you an upvote. Let us know what loopholes you’ve exploited in life in the comments and what you think about people who use them in real life.
However, just because something is technically allowed doesn’t mean that it’s done in the Spirit of the Law. [Add holy chanting sounds.] While loopholes can help some people live a better life, others can use them for less than admirable purposes. And, in some ways, using loopholes is a lot like cheating. Besides, somebody ends up getting the short end of the stick in most cases. Whether it’s a small mom and pop store or a mega-million multinational corp.
This post may include affiliate links.
Used to work at starbucks like 7 years ago and they used to print these receipts where if you filled out a survey it would give you a 6 digit code which you could then exchange for a free drink.
However when you gave in the receipt with the code we would just toss it in the garbage and then give the free drink. So over a shift I would just keep all the survey receipts when people didn't want them, write random numbers on them, then keep a wallet full of free coffee. Since I already got tons of free drinks, I would give them to homeless people and explain it was good for a free coffee. Probably gave away like 100 free drinks.
I paid three hundred dollars a month to park a really pimped out van in a heated garage in Boston. If you parked front in no one could see you. Found a spot near an electrical outlet and ran a line into the van. Paid for a $10 gym across the street that was open for 24 hours so I had all the hot showers I wanted. Served at a nearby restaurant so ate most of my meals for free. Watched tv on my laptop with the free WiFi from the coffee shop above me. Literally lived in downtown Boston for 310 dollars a month while I went to college.
I grew up down the street from universal studios and went there everyday after middle school. Eventually we learned to go into the VIP line for rides which nobody was ever in. When the guy stopped us and asked us for our vip tickets, we just told them a high up employee named "Rick" should've called it in. After two seconds on the radio trying to verify, every employee just gave up and let us through. We skipped lines for years with that method, and eventually ride attendants came to know us and just let us through. It was beautiful.
One day we got bold though and snuck into the studio area. Guards caught us and asked us who we were with. We told him our fictional "Rick" told us we can be here. Well the guards took radio verification way more serious, and managed to get a real Rick on the line. We waited for Rick to show up, knowing we were busted. Rick showed up, turns out he was actually the backlot manager at the time and gave us a strange look. The security guard asked us if we were with him and this dude said yes! He took us aside and asked us what we were doing and we told him we just loved film and the studio atmosphere. He loved that two young kids were interested in his job and began taking us all around to the studios, allowing us to sit in on tapings of various shows and so on, giving us a free pass to come back anytime, and also....vip line access.
SterlingBoardman’s thread got 64.7k upvotes and several hundred awards on Reddit. This just proves that the question they shared on the Ask Reddit subreddit was unique, out-of-the-box, and got our noggins jogging. It really made us think long and hard about using and abusing loopholes and whether it's right or wrong.
Personally, I’m a big believer in the Spirit of Justice. Not all rules, laws, and regulations are just and good. Similarly, not all things that are just and good have been written down and packaged in a neat and tidy stack of papers.
That’s why we use our common sense and why we have cultural customs and conventions (known as mores) to help guide our morality and how we behave in society. In other words, life is never as easy as following the rules as written. You can’t shut off your brain and your sense of what’s right. That’s why some legal loopholes can make us feel guilty inside—we know we’re doing something wrong by ‘gaming’ the system.
When I was a kid there was a pay phone down the street that if you put your quarter in made a call but no one answered it would give you back two quarters. Went there all the time and called home when I knew no one was there to answer.
I used to live in an apartment across the road from a casino whilst at University. They released an app where if you "check-in" you get points that go towards free food and drinks.
Because I was close enough to the casino I could just check-in without going to the casino itself.
Every Saturday I used to get a free burger, fries and drink and watch sport in the sports bar.
They eventually scrapped the app; it was awesome considering I was a broke Uni student.
I read once about a woman who worked across the street from a casino. Workplace parking was $20 if I remember correctly, but the casino parking was free if you showed proof of play. So she would go in before every workshift and spend $10, sometimes she won a bit of money back.
My Aunt and Uncle were trash collectors both professionally and as a hobby. My mom had pulled one of her epic [screw] ups (again) and we ended up living with them.
Most of our food came from the trash, however Dominoes had a rewards system where the boxes had blue or red tabs depending on the size of the pizza.
Collect enough tabs, get free pizzas.
Aunt and uncle collected thousands of those tabs. We ate pizza every weekend for months before the company caught on and they put an end to it. I was 11 at the time but I remember hearing that their address was banned for life from delivery. I'm pretty sure Dominoes also stopped the promotion shortly thereafter.....
It was awesome while it lasted.
In case you needed more persuading that loopholes aren’t all that Legal (notice the capital ‘L’) even though they’re legal (small ‘l’), Investopedia defines them as technicalities that let people or businesses “avoid the scope of a law or restriction without directly violating the law.”
You might not be breaking the law (technically), but you’re using a “flaw or defect” in it for your own gain because the people who drafted the law didn’t see the cracks in the legislation. The fact is, loopholes get closed all the time as some glaring limits of rules and regulations become obvious over time. No law will ever be perfect, so it’s a constant uphill battle against those who find the teeniest loopholes they can exploit.
And though it’s all fun and games on a small scale when you get a free burger because of some quirk in the rules, it can lead to some seriously dangerous things like tax evasion because of how complicated (and full of loopholes) things like tax codes are. At the end of the day, it’s up to us to decide if we use loopholes or end up relying on our conscience.
Because I was a good student and rarely got into trouble, I was allowed to have my own phone extension in my room. So, if I was out past curfew, I'd call home. When my mom answered, I'd say, "It's for me. I've got it." And she'd think I was up in my room.
She never did catch on. :D
Edit: It was 1976. My mom never knew. I know that because I confessed to it years later. She was very shocked and mad, and she grounded me. But I was forty and had my own house by then. My parents were the early-to-bed and early-to-rise type, and my room was a converted attic two floors up from the rest of the bedrooms. I often came home after everyone else was asleep because I had a part-time job, so I was used to sneaking in like a ninja. It was a bright yellow Princess phone. And finally, I knew a good thing, so I did not abuse this technique, just a few times when it was absolutely necessary, like the time we hitchhiked to see Peter Frampton.
In high school, our p.e. grade was based on improvement. We took a skills test at the beginning and another at the end and your grade was based on how much you improved. So, once I learned that, I always sucked at the first test and then did miraculously better at the second, so I had a massive "improvement" and thus, a better grade.
So if someone was a naturally good athlete and tried their best at the beginning and end would get a worse grade than someone who didn't try at all at first and then kinda tried later. That is pretty darn stupid (the policy, not the student who outsmarted it).
Arby's used to have a "take a survey on the back of the recipt and get a free roast beef sandwich". But when I got the free one, I got a recipt then too. I bought one sandwich got literally dozens for free over the course of a year or so.
If this is true, that was such an obvious loop hole that some one at Arby's must have been a blithering idiot to allow this to happen, for a year or so. But somehow I don't think this is a true story.
Was living near & attending our local university. While working full-time in an economy in the midst of a recession I barely had enough money to pay the bills, let alone eat. Where I live is very well known for its tourist industry & casinos so I had quite a few friends who worked in it & would tell me about these MASSIVE employee luncheon cafeterias. At that time there were no id cards or lanyards to be scanned or checked, all you needed was to find it & be dressed appropriately to the employers dress code. After my friend & I did a dry run on one of those trips, in order for me to find it without getting lost I would go it alone. For almost 3 years I had lunch/ dinner for free, learning the peak service times & the dead zones. Even got along with some of the cafeteria workers and custodial crews.
Speaking as someone who did setup/breakdown for these kind of events, this is actually fine. As long as it's not the kind of event where they get individual lunches per person, they typically order a lot more food than gets eaten. Sometimes you get people to eat up the leftovers, but often enough you have to throw perfectly good food in the trash at the end of the day. Please do take the extra sandwiches off our consciences.
I used to work at a grocery store and we had this era of the steak discounts. Hundreds of coupons for $5 off a steak were just everywhere for some reason. I found out that if I used the self checkout and bought a steak that was less than $5 while using the coupon, the machine would give me back the difference in change. I ate dozens of free steaks and filled my change jar up nicely.
I went to a sporting goods store and they asked me for my phone number when I was paying. I was in a bad mood and didn’t want to fight with the clerk so I told them our local area code + 555-1212 (which is the old number for directory assistance), clerk accepted it and I left. When I checked my receipt I had a huge number of loyalty points - because apparently a ton of other people did the same thing. I called the office the next day and switched the “account” to my new address. A half-dozen times over the next few years, I went and got free stuff with all the points that I kept racking up as one of their most loyal customers.
my mom and her friends use (area code) 8675309, like the song, and whenever I go out to grab something from the store, I just put it in and there's always a s**t ton of points
My aunt turned me on to this. It works most places in the US, so if you’re buying something that’s only on sale if you’re part of the loyalty program, you can probably use Jenny’s number instead of signing up yourself.
Load More Replies...i guess they figured this Loophole out... here they send a code on your cell when you try to redeem points... and that code needs to be entered into the register for redemption.
555-1212 was actually the number in Los Angeles/Hollywood for the correct time. 411 was a directory assistance. I also used to work as a telephone operator on Gower St in Hollywood.
They didn’t ask for your name to match the account that they already had on file with that phone number?
Way back when, I did the grocery shopping for my large family as a teenager. Mom didn’t drive, dad didn’t shop. I drove, so she send me for groceries. Deal was I could keep the coin part of the change from the purchase for doing the shopping for the family. Didn’t take me long to figure out to ask for a $10 roll of quarters each time when I was given change.
Went on for a few years; Mom didn’t know about it until I fessed up in my 20’s. “You little s**t,” she said while laughing.
I miss her.
2
Obligatory not years but I can't believe I got away with it- My mum gave me £20 to buy a big thing of a certain brand of cat food which normally costs £10.99. Now heres the thing- when I entered the store I was given a coupon for £5 off that particular brand of cat food. The store was ALSO doing £5 off the type of cat food I entered for. I got to the till and the food was priced at £5.99, I handed over my coupon and it was scanned so that the food was 0.99p. I couldn't believe my luck because normally it says "not for use in conjunction with any other offer". But here's the real kicker - the lady behind the till gave me ANOTHER COUPON so you can bet your goddamn life I went round again and left the store with £22.98 worth of cat food for £1.98, with a third coupon in my hand. The only reason I didn't keep exploiting the loophole was because I had to carry it all home on my BMX
This is super weird and I haven’t thought about it in years, but I suppose it was a loophole... Soda companies used to run giveaways where they would put a code under the cap and then you could enter the codes for points, and get free stuff once you had banked enough points. I was a stock boy at a local grocery store and we had to take care of the bottle return machines also. Any loose caps (and nasty soda juices) would settle in the bottoms of the bags, so on slow nights we would cut the corner of the bags to drain, and collect any loose caps which I would then wash in the mop sink and take home to bank the codes. I ended up getting some sweet stuff like a few CDs, a zip up sweatshirt, and even some decent noise cancelling headphones lol
Staples used to let you recycle an infinite amount of ink cartridges at $2 a pop. My old job used to run through ink cartridges at an insane rate and it happened to be my duty to recycle them. I brought them to Staples and recycled them under my Staples rewards account to what amounted to 1000s of dollars over time. If there wasnt something in the store I wanted to buy with the coupons, I could buy from their online store which had video games, tvs and other non office items. If I still didnt see something I wanted, I could buy a Visa giftcard or giftcard to another store via their website to translate the money in to direct cash. Staples eventually put a 10 cartridge per month cap on recycling which ended my madness. All technically legal mind you.
Not years, but when I was broke and had just relocated to a new city, I couldn’t afford WiFi for a few months. The first weekend I was laying around my apartment playing on my phone, and I noticed there was a WiFi network in range that was named ‘Gandalf.’ Well, I attempted to join and after being asked for the WPA, without hesitation I plugged in ‘youshallnotpass’ and was surfin’ the web for free for the next few months.
Part-time retail worker for big chain.
Work gives employees a 5% discount over all purchases, increasing to 10% on store products.
Gift cards are store products. So are vegetables and a lot of groceries.
By paying $45 on a $50 gift card and then using said card for my shopping, I can purchase $55.55 in groceries, for an effective 19% discount on almost all my essential shopping (and 14.5% on everything else). I have on occasion bought a card online on my phone while queueing at the checkout.
Four years strong and still wondering when they’ll realise they’re giving me a discount on money.
Local casino issued a $20 free play coupon in the newspaper with no expiration date. I talked to the newspaper delivery guy and asked him about that copy and he told me he's got 100's of them in the van as they were a few days old now. I got all of them, clipped out the coupons and proceeded to make $19.50 every day after work for around 500 or so days. Not quite years, but pretty damn close. The casino never printed a coupon without expiration/one per customer rules ever since.
Casinos here in Ontario give free play coupons that cannot be cashed out. You must play the full amount that the coupon is worth.
I'm still exploiting this one:
Whenever I need a shoulder and neck rub, I offer one to my partner.
He usually accepts, and I spend some time rubbing his shoulders while we watch TV. Then we switch and I get an awesome rub.
I find that if I just ask for one he will definitely do it but loses steam after a few minutes. I think when I give him one first it loosens his muscles up so he's more relaxed, plus maybe he feels more obligated.
I intend to keep on exploiting this for as long as I can.
At my current apartment complex, they just changed the laundry machines so you need to use this super s**tty slow app. I found out if you press start on the app and start on the machine and then back out of the app while it’s “chatting” with the machine, the machine will start but won’t charge any money.
Been washing and drying for free for a few months.
App name is similar to smallGS or smallPayments
Bank of America would give you 3% cash back points on gas purchases. Back when I did this, I was a heavy smoker, and realized by coincidence that if I paid for gas inside and made other purchases, that I would still get 3%
So buying like $1 of gas and cartons upon cartons of cigarettes became my thing.
Now I dont smoke anymore though, which is even better savings :)
Whole Foods used to have bacon on the Breakfast Bar. Cooked bacon weighs almost nothing! I would get a pound of cooked bacon for $8.00 It lasted almost a week! Bacon crumbles for the salad, for the turkey sandwich, and the 100 other things that you can toss bacon into!
I used this method for almost a year, then they stopped putting bacon out....sigh......
Worked out how to get the jackpot every time on a Connect 4 fruit machine in a pub I used to drink in.
It would cost about £5-£10 before you'd get into the bonus round, then when you did, you'd play a connect 4 game against the machine.
You place the first counter, and then after the machine places the next counter, you mirror the machines move. Every game ends in a draw, and you win the jackpot, which was £50.
The pub landlord removed the machine after around 3 months as it was regularly empty, basically paid for my drinking and more for 3 months!
About 10yrs ago American Eagle distributed $10 off $10 purchase coupons on my campus. No restictions. I asked nicely and one of the reps gave me a STACK of them. Guess how much socks and underwear were? $10.50. It was years before I ever paid more than .50 for a pair of either. Sunglasses were like $2. Flip flops. The accessories world was mine for the flaunting.
Never saw that deal again.
When we had a daily limit of one hour on our AOL account my sister figured out if you unplugged the phone line during your session and logged back in it reset your hour
At my old job we had a vending machine in the basement that gave change back when you bought something. Sometimes it gave more than you paid. No one used this machine as the basement was being reconstructed but it was regularly filled.
The thing we clocked in on when I worked at Kmart would round to the closest quarter hour. So by clocking in 8 minutes early, and clocking out 8 minutes after my shift, I got paid for 30 minutes rather than for the 16 minutes. By exploiting this, I was paid 2.5 hours of overtime a week. Cumulatively, during my time there, this added up to about 6.5 weeks of extra pay. I wasn’t ever caught, though.
I can see it being fairly easy to leave exactly 8 minutes past your clock out time, but checking in exactly 8 minutes early? That's super precise, and makes me think you would end up getting there earlier than that but lingering until exactly 8 minutes before check in to actually click the time clock. And what's the point of getting there early enough to get the extra time but not actually clocking in until you only have 1 minute to spare and might miss your window? Edit: I'm sorry that I wasn't clear - I am NOT judging this person or saying they were right or wrong to do this. I'm asking why they made it harder on themselves in a way that made it more likely they wouldn't get paid for their extra work every morning.
Circa Late 80s. You could make a long distance collect call from a pay phone, and charge it to a private number. The operator would call the other number to confirm. We’d ask the operator to call the number of another pay phone nearby,and have a friend authorize the call. Free long distance for almost a year.
Weren't the numbers of pay phones different to private home numbers? If they were, did the operators not recognise this or just not care?
Got keys to a new flat on a Friday afternoon, the place had electric but it wasn't in my name.
Went to the electric company just before closing and the lady said "flat 8 you say....... Hummm we only have record of 7 flats on that building. Tell you what (glances at the clock) come back Monday with the serial number on your meter, and we'll get you all hooked up"
I never went back and enjoyed free electric for over 2 years until i moved out.
Note: this post originally had 88 images. It’s been shortened to the top 30 images based on user votes.
I used to work at McDonald's in my school holidays and was pretty broke at that time. Employees at McDonald's usually prepares popular meals in advance to speed up the process and puts in under a heating cabinet. But only for short time.If within the time it wouldn't be sold, it went into trash. I ensured that the trash was only for food and not drinks and after my shift I would bring the bin to the junk container. But instead of throwing it into the container I would take it home. At home I would warm it up in the microwave and my entire family had a great meal
Back when I was in high-school my family was poor -very poor- and whenever we had no money to buy natural gas we would stop taking showers as that would deplete our stove reserve, our options basically coming down to eat food or take a hot shower (and being a cold area you can guess me and my sisters regularly stank), luckily my school had showers next to the pool with the only requirement at the time being wearing a swimsuit (as in wear googles, swim cap, etc), teachers and janitors didn’t check as there were a LOT of students so my sisters and I would regularly shower in the morning before school or after practice on weekends (Sunday was a “dirty” day), now we all know how to swim and one of my sisters is a diving competitor :D
A year after graduating I did liaison work for a customer with a long-term contract, so my company would send me to be on-site with them for 2 weeks at a time. Our normal travel policy was to take the company credit card and be trusted with it to cover reasonable expenses, but this customer didn't trust so easily, instead insisting to pay the "per diem" rate of $141 per day to cover hotel, food and gas in a semi-rural area. I stayed in the cheapest airport motel, drove the smallest rental car, and bought groceries instead of going out to eat. As a result, I was pocketing about $95/day including weekends, on top of my regular salary.
In my senior year of HS I had my own car so didn't need the bus. I'm also not a morning person. I was late almost every day of my senior year. Technically if you were late to home room 6 times you were supposed to get after school (or Saturday) detention. But they didn't care how many times you missed home room and they took attendance in all the classes. So I just hung out in the bathroom till the 1st period bell rang and went on my merry way. No-one ever caught on or cared...
Working at a big chain pizza place - was a delivery driver and since the only driver who spoke english would be sent on problem call outs or asked to help in the production line when busy. Anyway - set up a thing where a colleague would "accidentally" make the wrong pizza, I'd spot it, obviously couldn't deliver it. Wrong pizzas get thrown in the bin, but would be free for us to take and eat! So lots of free pizza for us and for the homeless guy who lived on the corner.
I have a loophole I am exploiting right now, ExxonMobil has a rewards program for gassing up, you just slide the rewards card before you fuel up and you earn points that converts over to money off fuel. I work for a company where I do alot of driving. I make sure every time I fuel up I use ExxonMobil and the company is paying for my points. So about one every month or two I get to use those points for a free tank of fuel in my personal vehicle
I accidentally discovered when I was a young teen that if I had run out of texts, i could still send it if i timed it perfectly, resending it just as a text came in to tell me my message had failed, it would somehow slip through. I did feel a bit bad, and tried to only use it for when I really "needed" to, but being a teen it was coz I wanted to chat with friends. The loophole lasted only a few months before they closed it. Not proud of exploiting the loophole, but kinda proud I found it, if that makes sense?
Poorly thought out and badly monitored policies that have loopholes are one thing but way too many of these are people stealing from the place they work. Most are petty theft that isn't worth it for the business or police to prosecute. That doesn't make it excusable. I don't steal because I'm afraid of getting caught.I don't steal because I have integrity and it's wrong.
When I was in high school, I got my license in November. I went to pay for a parking pass, and no one was in the office to take it. I tried several times, each time, no one would be there. I gave up and put the application in my windshield. I figured if they wanted my money, they'd have to find me because I was tired of having to try to catch someone. I never got a ticket. Even got called to move my car once when there was going to be some repaving and no one said anything.
When we had bought our new house, we found that when you do an address change with the post office, they just give you a packet to fill out. In the packet was coupons. Particularly a 10% off coupon for Lowes. So every time we had a project, or a big purchase, we'd hit up the post office first and get an address change packet, grab the Lowes coupon, and just toss the rest of it in the recycling. We did this countless times over the course of a few years before they finally discontinued it.
I think they still do this but they send the packet to your new address after it is processed.
Load More Replies...About a decade ago, 2 branches of Sephora in Paris, France (where I lived) were testing out a sample vending machine. You would scan your ticket and select your sample(s) - the number of samples depended on how much you had spent. Also since I had Gold membership status (I guess it's the equivalent of Rouge in the US?) I had access to higher-end and/or bigger samples. It turns out that the machine went away after a couple of years, but I took advantage of it while it lasted, by breaking up my purchases so I would get as many separate tickets as possible (you could only scan each once), and sometimes if there was a sample I wanted to collect multiples of, I'd buy the cheapest things like cotton pads, a sharpener, a shower puff... just so I could keep going back to the sample machine. While it wasn't stealing, I did feel like I was taking a little too much advantage... Oh well, it certainly was fun while it lasted!
One and only time i used it and it was on accident- my highschool had a change machine near the vending machines. Vending machines would only take change. I wanted something from the vending machine to i put 5 dollars into the change machine. The change machine had been accidentally filled with 1$ coins. Best day of my entire highschool career. It was on a friday so i did go in monday and quietly tell them about the problem because i was scared of being in trouble but they let me keep the 25$ so really, I won.
I worked at a Kinko's all through college - the midnight shift. We got the munchies a lot. There were a few candy machines... You know the ones? You put in a quarter and it spits out, like, five M&Ms? Well the Skittles machine was a little wonky. If you knew how to turn the k**b, for one quarter, you could basically jiggle it until the entire machine emptied out. But we were smart and never actually emptied it. We just took enough to make us happy, but not clue in the owner. I filled up on Skittles for four years. We made Skittles games. We made Skittles recipes. We made Skittled art. We. Ate. Skittles. We I haven't eaten one single SKittle since that job ended. And yeah. I feel guilty now. I'm a grown-up and I know someone paid for those SKittles, and it wasn't Kinko's. But I was young and dumb. And broke.
Early 2000s my pay as you go mobile had an update. From then on it didn't charge me for calls, only texts. Had a landline as well. Used the mobile for emergencies, anyone's emergencies for a few years, til the battery went.
Some of these are clever, but a lot of them are (morally/ethically speaking, even if not technically) theft. Screwing over your employer for an extra 30 minutes you didn't work is theft. "Free" electricity is not free -- someone is paying for it. Gaming the system is often theft. It saddens me to see how many people are okay with this. (I don't fault people in poverty for dumpster diving to get coupons for free pizzas.)
so much of this is downright stealing. it's not a loophole. you're just a lowlife thief.
I used to work at McDonald's in my school holidays and was pretty broke at that time. Employees at McDonald's usually prepares popular meals in advance to speed up the process and puts in under a heating cabinet. But only for short time.If within the time it wouldn't be sold, it went into trash. I ensured that the trash was only for food and not drinks and after my shift I would bring the bin to the junk container. But instead of throwing it into the container I would take it home. At home I would warm it up in the microwave and my entire family had a great meal
Back when I was in high-school my family was poor -very poor- and whenever we had no money to buy natural gas we would stop taking showers as that would deplete our stove reserve, our options basically coming down to eat food or take a hot shower (and being a cold area you can guess me and my sisters regularly stank), luckily my school had showers next to the pool with the only requirement at the time being wearing a swimsuit (as in wear googles, swim cap, etc), teachers and janitors didn’t check as there were a LOT of students so my sisters and I would regularly shower in the morning before school or after practice on weekends (Sunday was a “dirty” day), now we all know how to swim and one of my sisters is a diving competitor :D
A year after graduating I did liaison work for a customer with a long-term contract, so my company would send me to be on-site with them for 2 weeks at a time. Our normal travel policy was to take the company credit card and be trusted with it to cover reasonable expenses, but this customer didn't trust so easily, instead insisting to pay the "per diem" rate of $141 per day to cover hotel, food and gas in a semi-rural area. I stayed in the cheapest airport motel, drove the smallest rental car, and bought groceries instead of going out to eat. As a result, I was pocketing about $95/day including weekends, on top of my regular salary.
In my senior year of HS I had my own car so didn't need the bus. I'm also not a morning person. I was late almost every day of my senior year. Technically if you were late to home room 6 times you were supposed to get after school (or Saturday) detention. But they didn't care how many times you missed home room and they took attendance in all the classes. So I just hung out in the bathroom till the 1st period bell rang and went on my merry way. No-one ever caught on or cared...
Working at a big chain pizza place - was a delivery driver and since the only driver who spoke english would be sent on problem call outs or asked to help in the production line when busy. Anyway - set up a thing where a colleague would "accidentally" make the wrong pizza, I'd spot it, obviously couldn't deliver it. Wrong pizzas get thrown in the bin, but would be free for us to take and eat! So lots of free pizza for us and for the homeless guy who lived on the corner.
I have a loophole I am exploiting right now, ExxonMobil has a rewards program for gassing up, you just slide the rewards card before you fuel up and you earn points that converts over to money off fuel. I work for a company where I do alot of driving. I make sure every time I fuel up I use ExxonMobil and the company is paying for my points. So about one every month or two I get to use those points for a free tank of fuel in my personal vehicle
I accidentally discovered when I was a young teen that if I had run out of texts, i could still send it if i timed it perfectly, resending it just as a text came in to tell me my message had failed, it would somehow slip through. I did feel a bit bad, and tried to only use it for when I really "needed" to, but being a teen it was coz I wanted to chat with friends. The loophole lasted only a few months before they closed it. Not proud of exploiting the loophole, but kinda proud I found it, if that makes sense?
Poorly thought out and badly monitored policies that have loopholes are one thing but way too many of these are people stealing from the place they work. Most are petty theft that isn't worth it for the business or police to prosecute. That doesn't make it excusable. I don't steal because I'm afraid of getting caught.I don't steal because I have integrity and it's wrong.
When I was in high school, I got my license in November. I went to pay for a parking pass, and no one was in the office to take it. I tried several times, each time, no one would be there. I gave up and put the application in my windshield. I figured if they wanted my money, they'd have to find me because I was tired of having to try to catch someone. I never got a ticket. Even got called to move my car once when there was going to be some repaving and no one said anything.
When we had bought our new house, we found that when you do an address change with the post office, they just give you a packet to fill out. In the packet was coupons. Particularly a 10% off coupon for Lowes. So every time we had a project, or a big purchase, we'd hit up the post office first and get an address change packet, grab the Lowes coupon, and just toss the rest of it in the recycling. We did this countless times over the course of a few years before they finally discontinued it.
I think they still do this but they send the packet to your new address after it is processed.
Load More Replies...About a decade ago, 2 branches of Sephora in Paris, France (where I lived) were testing out a sample vending machine. You would scan your ticket and select your sample(s) - the number of samples depended on how much you had spent. Also since I had Gold membership status (I guess it's the equivalent of Rouge in the US?) I had access to higher-end and/or bigger samples. It turns out that the machine went away after a couple of years, but I took advantage of it while it lasted, by breaking up my purchases so I would get as many separate tickets as possible (you could only scan each once), and sometimes if there was a sample I wanted to collect multiples of, I'd buy the cheapest things like cotton pads, a sharpener, a shower puff... just so I could keep going back to the sample machine. While it wasn't stealing, I did feel like I was taking a little too much advantage... Oh well, it certainly was fun while it lasted!
One and only time i used it and it was on accident- my highschool had a change machine near the vending machines. Vending machines would only take change. I wanted something from the vending machine to i put 5 dollars into the change machine. The change machine had been accidentally filled with 1$ coins. Best day of my entire highschool career. It was on a friday so i did go in monday and quietly tell them about the problem because i was scared of being in trouble but they let me keep the 25$ so really, I won.
I worked at a Kinko's all through college - the midnight shift. We got the munchies a lot. There were a few candy machines... You know the ones? You put in a quarter and it spits out, like, five M&Ms? Well the Skittles machine was a little wonky. If you knew how to turn the k**b, for one quarter, you could basically jiggle it until the entire machine emptied out. But we were smart and never actually emptied it. We just took enough to make us happy, but not clue in the owner. I filled up on Skittles for four years. We made Skittles games. We made Skittles recipes. We made Skittled art. We. Ate. Skittles. We I haven't eaten one single SKittle since that job ended. And yeah. I feel guilty now. I'm a grown-up and I know someone paid for those SKittles, and it wasn't Kinko's. But I was young and dumb. And broke.
Early 2000s my pay as you go mobile had an update. From then on it didn't charge me for calls, only texts. Had a landline as well. Used the mobile for emergencies, anyone's emergencies for a few years, til the battery went.
Some of these are clever, but a lot of them are (morally/ethically speaking, even if not technically) theft. Screwing over your employer for an extra 30 minutes you didn't work is theft. "Free" electricity is not free -- someone is paying for it. Gaming the system is often theft. It saddens me to see how many people are okay with this. (I don't fault people in poverty for dumpster diving to get coupons for free pizzas.)
so much of this is downright stealing. it's not a loophole. you're just a lowlife thief.