Unclaimed gift cards are a factor for anyone planning a gift card incentive program, big or small.
Yes, platforms like Giftbit are designed to make it easy for your recipients to receive, claim, and use their digital gift cards.
But no matter how easy you make the process, not every reward gets claimed.
Sometimes a recipient misses the email. Sometimes they open the reward but never select a gift card. Maybe they intend to come back later and completely forget.
Whatever the reason, unclaimed gift cards can raise real questions for program managers, finance teams, and anyone responsible for managing an incentive budget.
So what actually happens if a recipient doesn’t claim their gift card reward?
The answer depends on your gift card provider and their policies. For Giftbit customers, the answer depends on the type of reward you sent and whether they gave it an expiry date.
In this article, we'll help you make sense of unclaimed gift cards so you can optimize your program while keeping your finance team and recipients happy (spoiler alert: depending on the type of reward you send through Giftbit, you might be able to recoup some of that unused value).
📨 The TL;DR
Unclaimed gift cards shouldn't derail your incentive program or your budget.
Find a gift card platform that tracks rewards from send to delivery to claim, and that returns value on unclaimed expiring rewards.
You'll also want to be able to follow up on unclaimed rewards (so you'll also need reliable real-time claim data, too).
Let's start by defining the two different stages in the reward journey.
An unclaimed gift card (or unclaimed prepaid card, like a Visa® or Mastercard®) is a reward offer the recipient has not accepted yet.
Perhaps they haven't opened the reward email, clicked the reward link, or selected a gift card from the available options.
Either way, that gift card (and the value attached to it) isn't in their pocket yet. They were sent an offer to enjoy a gift card, but they haven't done anything to actually accept that offer.
An unredeemed gift card is a different story. Once a recipient claims their reward and selects a gift card, that card belongs to them. Even if they don’t spend the balance right away, the value has already been transferred to the selected brand or prepaid card.
So, that gift card or prepaid card is theirs to do with as they wish. Even if that means it sits in their digital wallet untouched from now 'till eternity.
A gift card platform like Giftbit can help you manage a reward before it’s claimed.
But after the recipient claims it, the card’s balance, expiration rules, and replacement policies are generally managed by the gift card brand.
It's no longer in your hands (and neither is any of the budget that went to it).
And now for the big question: what happens if your recipient doesn't use the gift card you sent them.
For Giftbit customers, that depends entirely on the type of gift card they chose to send.
- If a standard Giftbit reward is sent (no claim-by date set), the offer stays open indefinitely until claimed.
- The funds you allocated remain reserved for the recipient and are not automatically refunded or returned to your account unless you proactively cancel the offer.
If you send what we call a 'Standard' Giftbit reward without a claim-by date, the reward offer stays open until the recipient claims it. Once you send the value, it's essentially gone from your account.*
That means the funds remain reserved for that recipient. They are not automatically returned to your Giftbit account just because the recipient hasn’t claimed the reward yet.
This is the right approach for many gift card use cases, typically those around service rewards and payouts. If someone earned a reward through an employee recognition program, customer referral, loyalty program, research study, rebate, or customer appreciation campaign, you'll likely want that reward to remain available.
*Important: If you no longer want the reward to stay active, you also have the option proactively cancel the unclaimed offer.
If you send a promotional reward with a claim-by expiry date, the recipient must claim it before that date.
If not claimed by the deadline, the offer expires and the funds are returned to your Giftbit account, minus a small fee (often Giftbit shares part of this “breakage” with you).
This approach lets you recover a portion of your budget and redeploy it for future rewards
Promotional rewards work differently.
If you send a promotional reward with a claim-by expiry date, the recipient must claim it before that deadline. If they don’t claim the reward in time, the offer expires.
Translation: it's the offer that expires, not the gift card itself.
When that happens, the unclaimed funds can be returned to your Giftbit account according to your program terms.
By default, Giftbit returns 25% of unclaimed breakage on promotional rewards. This percentage may be adjusted for larger programs or custom agreements.
This structure is especially useful for campaigns where you need clear budget controls, such as:
Instead of treating every sent reward as a sunk cost, promotional expiry gives you a way to close the campaign, recover a portion of unused reward funds, and redeploy that budget toward future incentives.
Once a recipient claims a gift card, the value is transferred to the selected brand or prepaid card.
At that point, the card is considered issued to the recipient. Any rules around expiration, replacement, lost card access, or remaining balance are handled according to that brand’s terms.
For example, if a recipient chooses a digital DoorDash card, it'll be governed by DoorDash's policies (not Giftbit's).
We can show you that the reward was claimed, but it does not control how the recipient spends the card balance after that point.
| Reward type | If the reward is not claimed | If the reward is claimed |
|---|---|---|
| Standard reward with no expiry | The offer remains open and funds stay reserved for the recipient unless you cancel it | The card belongs to the recipient and is managed by the selected brand’s rules |
| Promotional reward with expiry | The offer expires after the claim-by date and a portion of unclaimed funds may be returned to your Giftbit account | The card belongs to the recipient and funds are not returned through Giftbit |
Remember, an unclaimed reward and an undeliverable reward are not always the same thing.
An unclaimed reward usually means the recipient had access to the reward but did not claim it.
But an undeliverable reward may mean the recipient never had a real chance to claim it in the first place.
Maybe the email address was entered incorrectly. Maybe the message bounced. Maybe the reward got filtered or missed. Maybe the recipient saw the message but didn’t recognize what it was.
That’s why reward status matters. If all you can see is that a reward was “sent,” the trail ends too early. You might never know whether the recipient received the message, opened it, clicked through, or selected a card.
With clearer reward tracking, teams can identify where rewards are getting stuck and take action sooner. That might mean correcting an email address, resending a reward, sending a reminder, or adjusting the delivery method for the next campaign.
For program managers, this type of detailed gift card tracking protects the participant experience.
And for finance teams, it helps ensure the budget is tied to real reward delivery and engagement.
Sending a reward is the beginning of the process, not the end. That's why, for example, at Giftbit we've focused so heavily on creating a simple and delightful recipient experience.
For an incentive program to work, you need to know what happened after the reward was sent. Did the email deliver? Did the recipient open it? Did they claim the reward? Is the reward still outstanding?
⚠️This is where many incentive programs run into trouble.
⚠️ Namely, many gift card providers only give you fulfillment data.
⚠️ You can see what you ordered and what you sent ... but then the trail goes cold.
So you might not ever know whether recipients actually received their rewards, claimed them, or needed a reminder.
And that's a really big, glaring blind spot.
If you can’t see whether recipients are claiming their rewards, it becomes much harder to understand whether your incentive budget is working. You may not know whether rewards are sitting untouched, whether participants are having delivery issues, or whether your claim window is too long or too short.
(This can be particularly problematic in certain research incentive programs, where researchers might be legally required to make meaningful efforts to ensure their recipients got their rewards).
Giftbit gives you visibility into reward status so you can track rewards from delivery through claim. That means you can see which rewards have been sent, opened, claimed, and redeemed, then use that data to follow up or improve your campaign.
Let's cover a few examples to see how detailed, transparent reward reporting can help you make better decisions across the full lifecycle of your campaign.
If most recipients claim their rewards within the first few days, you may not need a long claim window. Shorter promotional periods can help you keep campaigns focused and make budget planning easier.
On the other hand, if many recipients claim later in the campaign, that may tell you your audience needs more time, clearer instructions, or a reminder sequence.
If a recipient says they never received their reward, your team needs more than a sent date.
Reward tracking makes it easier to see where things stand. If the reward was delivered but not opened, you might resend the link or remind the recipient to check their inbox. If it was opened but not claimed, you might follow up with clearer instructions.
This is especially important for research, healthcare, rebates, referrals, and customer programs where a missed reward can create support tickets or participant frustration.
How to Minimize Unused Rewards
→ Choose delivery options recipients are most likely to open (email, SMS, direct link).
→ Personalize your message and remind them if they haven’t claimed.
→Track activity. Giftbit’s reporting shows status at every step for easy follow-up.
💡Pro-tip: Recipients should immediately understand why they are receiving the reward, who it's from, and what they need to do next.
A short, specific message usually works better than a generic one. Use a direct message to give your recipient context and make the next step obvious.
For example:
If a reward hasn’t been claimed, a simple reminder can help.
This is especially useful for promotional rewards with a claim-by date. A reminder gives recipients another chance to act before the offer expires, while still helping you keep the campaign timeline under control.
Your dashboard can show you where rewards are getting stuck.
If many people are not opening the reward, you may have a delivery or subject line issue. If people are opening but not claiming, the reward instructions or reward options may need work. If claim rates are strong early and then drop off, you may be able to shorten future claim windows.
The goal is not just to send rewards. The goal is to understand how recipients interact with them.
Unclaimed gift cards are not just a recipient issue. They’re also a program visibility issue.
If your reward provider only shows that a reward was sent, you may have no clear way to tell whether the recipient claimed it, whether it’s still outstanding, or whether the funds can be returned after expiry.
That lack of visibility makes it harder to optimize your campaigns. It also makes it harder to answer basic budget questions, such as:
Ultimately, when you can see the full reward journey, you can make better decisions, support recipients more effectively, and get way more bang for your buck.
Unclaimed gift cards aren't always a problem. Sometimes recipients simply take longer to claim. Sometimes a reward should remain available indefinitely. Other times, especially in promotional campaigns, an expiry date and breakage return structure can help you protect your budget.
The most important thing is visibility.