Two guests hand over identically wrapped boxes, your kid opens them back to back, and there it is: the same building set twice. This post is for parents hosting a birthday and for anyone who's ever worried their gift will show up in duplicate. Here's how it actually plays out, and how to keep it from turning into an awkward moment.
Kids handle duplicate gifts far better than adults expect. A five year old who opens two of the same LEGO set is usually thrilled to have twice as many bricks, not confused about the overlap. The awkwardness lives entirely in the grown-up chairs around the room, where two gift-givers suddenly clock that they had the same idea.
So the real question isn't "what happens to the kid." It's "how do you handle the adults in the moment." And the answer is easy: you keep it light, you thank both people the same way, and you move on to the next present. Nobody wants a spotlight on the fact that two people shopped the same aisle at the same big box store. A quick "oh perfect, now we've got plenty" does more work than any elaborate save.
Duplicates happen because a lot of people are pulling from the exact same shelf. When the popular toy of the season is stacked in a pyramid at the front of every chain store, and half the party guests grabbed it on the way in, the math catches up with you. This is the single biggest reason we see the same item show up twice at a party.
It's also why the gifts that never duplicate tend to come from independent shops. When someone shops with us here in Nashville, they're often walking out with something the rest of the party guests haven't seen at all... a puzzle from a maker most people don't know by name, a build-it kit that isn't in the Sunday circular, a game that sits in a category the big stores skip entirely. The odds of two of those landing under the same birthday kid drop way down. It's not magic. It's just a wider, less obvious selection.
Keep the reaction identical for both gifts. Kids read the room fast, and if you get more excited about one duplicate than the other, the second gift-giver notices too. Same "wow," same thank you, same energy. That's the whole trick.
If your child is old enough to understand, a quiet word before the party helps. Something like: "If you get two of something, just say thank you and we'll figure it out later." That one sentence heads off the loud "I already have this!" that every parent dreads. Most kids over four can hold that instruction just fine.
Do not open the returns conversation at the party. Whether or not you exchange one of the duplicates is a decision for after everyone goes home. Bringing it up while the gift-giver is standing right there turns a non-event into an uncomfortable one.
You've got three honest options, and none of them require telling anyone they picked wrong.
Keep both if it's something that scales. Building sets, art supplies, craft kits, card games... these are all better with more. Two of the same 500 piece bin of blocks isn't a problem, it's a bigger city. Same with a double set of markers or a second deck for a game that plays better with more cards in the mix.
Save one for later if it doesn't scale. A duplicate board game or a second copy of the same stuffed animal makes a ready-made gift for the next party your kid gets invited to, and there's always a next party. Tuck it in a closet. Future you will be grateful when a Saturday invitation shows up and you've already got something on hand.
Exchange one quietly if neither of the above fits. This is where keeping the receipt matters, and it's worth gently reminding relatives that a gift receipt is a kindness, not an insult. Most stores, ours included, would much rather help you swap a duplicate for something your kid doesn't already have than have it sit unused. The Consumer Product Safety Commission also reminds families to keep original packaging on toys long enough to check age labels and any recall notices, so holding onto the box a little while serves double duty.
The cleanest fix is a little coordination up front. If you're sending invitations, it's completely fair to note a theme or a short wish list. Parents appreciate the guidance more than you'd think... most gift-givers are relieved to be pointed somewhere instead of guessing.
For the guests who want something that won't collide with anyone else's pick, this is exactly the kind of thing we handle. Someone can tell us the birthday kid's age and what they're into, and we'll steer them toward something that isn't stacked at the front of every store in Brown County. That's the quiet advantage of shopping local for a party gift: you're pulling from a shelf most of the other guests never walked past.
And if you're the one hosting, our done-for-you party shopping means the favors and the activity toys are already picked with variety in mind, so the goodie bags aren't five copies of the same thing either. Fewer duplicates on your end, fewer on theirs, and a party that feels put together instead of picked over.
The duplicate gift is one of those parenting moments that feels enormous for about ten seconds and then evaporates. Handle the adults gently, keep your kid's reaction even, and decide the rest after the cake's gone.
Toy Company
The Toy Chest has been a trusted independent toy store for 55 years—with decades of experience helping families find the perfect toys.
Nashville, Indiana
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