Sorry, but I seem to preface some reviews as what it used to be. This used to be Little Big Buck 99 cents store, or I believe that’s what it was. Great store but the problem was that they found out too late that their pricing scheme was running them in the red. To my knowledge, this is the largest of the Dollartree stores in Macon/Warner Robbins and likely the best. The Dollartree has the habit of stocking an item(bought likely as a closeout item) and then when it’s gone, it’s gone. This store is likely the one that has the most of whatever’s stocked and the last to run out of such stock. Shopping here feels safe, unlike a couple of other locations. It’s in a great location, too. Walmart, Aldi’s, Kroger, Lowe’s, Home Depot are located within a mile radius of this store. It’s very easy to get lost in the store, not really as far as not knowing where you’re at but by browsing around at the merchandise. They have a few products that are a great buy like Awesome cleaner. That’s great as a general purpose cleaner, though it’s hard on plastic. Some spices, if you catch them right, are a good buy but lately the amounts have shifted to a smaller bottle and therefore, a higher cost. Glasses, are hard to beat. Glasses as the kind that ice tea comes in. You break it, you just lost a dollar and can go back to get another glass. What I don’t think is even worth carrying out are a few things that is nothing much more than water. Toilet bowl cleaner, Johnny Fresh is the first thing to come to mind. I believe it’s mainly blue coloring and a couple of drops of ammonia. Bleach. I haven’t tried this or recommend it, but I wouldn’t be surprised if someone drank it and just went BURP! It’s that’s weak. Some of the items are overpriced when you factor the amounts. Some food items are just poorly marketed junk. Tomato juice is a good example. Compare their’s with tomato juice from a regular grocery store. Unless they changed it, you get an inferior product and the vitamin C level just isn’t there. Other dry food goods when compared to price per oz. meets a similar fate of more pricey than other stores.