Good Morning America has launched exclusive 'GMA' Deals & Steals focused on summer solutions, and Tory Johnson's Deals & Steals selections are available through GMADeals.com. The lineup is presented as a limited blowout of household and outdoor items meant to move quickly; visitors are warned the offers exist only while supplies last and on the dates listed in the shopping links.
The offers include recognizable names such as Karcher and Alpen Optics and are advertised with prices that start at just $15 and discounts that reach up to 75% off. Those two figures — $15 and 75% — are the simplest measure of the sale's reach: entry-level bargains alongside deep markdowns on higher-priced items, all organized under the Tory Johnson brand of Deals & Steals.
The shopping setup carries several practical conditions readers should note before clicking. When customers use the shopping links they will leave ABCNews.com and GoodMorningAmerica.com and land on e-commerce sites that operate under different terms and privacy policies. Shipping rates quoted are valid in the continental U.S. only. The pages that handle orders may include vendor-specific notices: there are no back orders unless a vendor explicitly states otherwise, and there are no rain checks.
Those limitations are part of the trade-off here: quick access to steep discounts in exchange for the certainty that the inventory is finite and the final buying terms are set by third-party sellers. Prices may change from the date of publication, and the deals are available only while supplies last, so a product shown in a listing may disappear or be repriced without notice. For buyers who need help with a purchase, the site directs visitors to email help@gmadeals.com.
There is a financial angle readers should also register. ABC and Tory Johnson will receive a commission for purchases made through the shopping links. That arrangement is standard for media-affiliate commerce but it matters here because the shopping pages are presented directly alongside editorial programming and branded segments. The sale is editorially curated, yet the revenue relationship is explicit: purchases routed through those links generate commissions for the broadcaster and the presenter tied to the Deals & Steals name.
That intersection creates a practical tension for consumers: the urgency baked into the sale — limited dates, finite supply, no rain checks, no general back orders — pushes a quick decision, while the commerce takes place off the news site under other terms. For readers accustomed to traditional retail returns, the handbook is different; vendor policies control after the click. The site does not promise inventory replenishment or price stability.
For anyone tracking the particular items named in the promotion, the selection is concrete but not permanent. Brands called out in the promotion include Karcher and Alpen Optics; other product lines are part of the Tory Johnson curation on GMADeals.com. Those shopping links list the specific dates the deals are live, and the sale mechanics — from shipping zones to return and order policy — are governed by the e-commerce partner handling the purchase.
If you are watching for a specific summer tool or an optics deal, the most consequential move is simple: check the shopping link now and buy if the price and vendor terms meet your needs. Because there are no rain checks and no general back orders, waiting risks losing the discount entirely. If questions arise after a purchase or during checkout, help@gmadeals.com is the contact provided for assistance.
Tory Johnson's name is on the offers and her Deals & Steals are clearly positioned as a fast-turn, limited-inventory sale that can deliver steep savings — starting at $15 and climbing to discounts as deep as 75% — but only for buyers willing to accept vendor terms, commissions paid to ABC and Johnson, and the simple reality that once an item is gone, it is gone.




