Potential to obtain £50+ worth of items for £16.60 delivered given some of Asda's deals as there are some good rollback/multi buy deals to be had with some items less than half their usual price so you could in theory obtain more than £50 worth of items (at their usual cost price) for £16.60 assuming cashback tracks and free delivery code works on the £25 spend (some people are however noting that their minimum spend is £40 - see comments below).
Some examples of less than half price items here - many more to be had with a little research:
Could be useful for a top up shop or to stock up on certain items without leaving the house, assuming this works.
Also, may be worth checking with your card provider account to see if you have any additional cashback when using Asda through certain cards. At least 1% should be available for most but some may be able to get more back and reduce the overall cost even more.
Free delivery offer ends 14.02.16 and is available for the first 30,500 customers.
Hope this works - please share successes if so.
Top comments
dognobs
8 Feb 169#27
quick tip from somebody who is a delivery driver for asda put somethin your basket say £20 bottle of vodka or 2 get the stuff you want delivered and ask for refund on the 2 bottles at the door step. you can use this trick to get around the minimum order amount :wink:
i also could share other tips as i am leaving in two weeks. ALWAYS GET MORNING DELIVERYS you are less likey to get subs or missing items.
treat the drivers with respect we are the last in line and doing a hard manual job in all weathers for just over minimum wage. remember you are getting a service with temperature controlled shopping delivered to your door for less than the price of a large letter stamp!
in all fairness i dont know how home shopping can survive it costs £15 per a customer per shop its only a matter of time before it all ends. the future is click and collect argos style shops where you just collect your picked shopping but you cant enter the shop.
All comments (41)
escortboy
7 Feb 16#1
Just seen 3 items that we buy a lot of being cheaper than Co-Op, Waitrose etc, just stocking up on those 3 items hits £25 and will save us massively compared to buying from our local and they deliver it to our door for free, and we get £8.40 cashback. Fantastic deal and even without cashback and free delivery buying from here for the high consumption items is a winner, thanks op.
yoshiiiii to escortboy
7 Feb 161#2
Glad to help - savings are better in our pockets!!!
Sorry to ask, but I do have a message that I need to spend 40 to checkout, how can I buy things only for 25 and have them delivered?
stingergb
7 Feb 16#5
How can I buy items for only 25 when I get a message that I need 40 worh of products to check out?
yoshiiiii
7 Feb 16#6
The site says £25 minimum order for Home Delivery so not sure - sorry.
stingergb
7 Feb 16#7
Mine says 40 pounds minimum.
stingergb
7 Feb 16#8
'You need to spend £40.00 on your grocery shopping before you can checkout.'
yoshiiiii to stingergb
7 Feb 16#9
Definitely says £25 minimum on mine without being logged in. Very misleading if you are having to spend £40.
qavi23
7 Feb 16#10
£25 for me too
Sophiasky
7 Feb 16#11
Thank you, will take a look at this.
yoshiiiii to Sophiasky
7 Feb 16#12
Hope it works for you given a comment above about needing to spend £40 for home delivery.
lovetolaugh
7 Feb 16#13
Thankyou - excellent deal x
yoshiiiii to lovetolaugh
7 Feb 16#15
Can you confirm that it worked so others know the position given the comment above about needing to spend £40 for home delivery?
Sophiasky
7 Feb 16#14
Comes up as £25 without logging in, but perhaps it will change to £40 once I have registered and started shopping - I will see.
daydreamer44
7 Feb 16#16
Thanks, will try later (hope not too late :smirk:)
yoshiiiii to daydreamer44
7 Feb 16#17
Hope it works for you.
secretmsg
7 Feb 16#18
£25 for me but just seen topcashback deal now .. can it be because going through topcashback is making you do atleast £40 ?
yoshiiiii to secretmsg
7 Feb 16#19
Good question and the TCB description is a bit vague for the free delivery code as it quotes both £25 and £40 on my account.
tonge77
7 Feb 16#20
£12.50 at Quidco
yoshiiiii to tonge77
7 Feb 16#21
On my Quidco account it says £12.50 for new customer orders over £60 and £8 for new customer orders between £25-£59.99.
If it is £12.50 for others on Quidco and you have already ordered through TCB you may be interested in this:
I put a claim in with TC as well all the time at a split second and get both
edinburgher
7 Feb 16#23
The different minimum spend may depend on geography? ie where you are in the UK
edinburgher
7 Feb 16#24
Just looked on Topcashback, 25 min for new customers of TBB, £40 for existing ones.
rdbradshaw
7 Feb 16#25
Is it possible to open a new account with new email details just like we did with the Tesco online account ?
shug119
7 Feb 16#26
looks good
dognobs
8 Feb 169#27
quick tip from somebody who is a delivery driver for asda put somethin your basket say £20 bottle of vodka or 2 get the stuff you want delivered and ask for refund on the 2 bottles at the door step. you can use this trick to get around the minimum order amount :wink:
i also could share other tips as i am leaving in two weeks. ALWAYS GET MORNING DELIVERYS you are less likey to get subs or missing items.
treat the drivers with respect we are the last in line and doing a hard manual job in all weathers for just over minimum wage. remember you are getting a service with temperature controlled shopping delivered to your door for less than the price of a large letter stamp!
in all fairness i dont know how home shopping can survive it costs £15 per a customer per shop its only a matter of time before it all ends. the future is click and collect argos style shops where you just collect your picked shopping but you cant enter the shop.
Monzer
8 Feb 16#28
I just signed up for topcashback.. never used it before or ASDA. Just ordered £25 of groceries but nothing shows up on my topcashback dashboard yet? I did everything right. Cookies on etc. Is this normal?
yoshiiiii to Monzer
8 Feb 161#30
Unfortunately this sort of thing does occasionally happen. If it doesn't appear on your account you may wish to follow this guidance:
The future will be electric vehicles and home delivery boxes at residences so that customers don't need to be at home. Delivery cost will be reduced per customer as the uptake will be greater and deliveries can be organised per street. Boxes at homes mean people can be shoehorned into slots they usually wouldn't take.
Click and collect doesn't solve the environmental issue. It's merely a stop gap.
bordonman
8 Feb 16#32
And flying saucers to get to work! Dream on. Milk was delivered by electric vehicles, and that's died due to expense/people not at home. It's home deliveries of any sort that are dead. Unless everyone has some sort of refigerated secure place, things can't just be left. I'm not sure about click and collect either. Stand outside any supermarket and watch, Click and collect is probably a fraction of one percent of business.
Vanderlust
8 Feb 16#33
Did you just compared milk delivery. A single item, to a full grocery delivery.
Refrigerated delivery boxes for homes are already under way and being invested by the industry. A Dutch company is bringing it.
Comparing something mundane like grocery delivery to flying saucers or even thinking it's not feasible is hilariously out of touch. Not only will it be the norm, it will become increasingly inexpensive as automation takes over.
Amazon are even investing in full cargo automation at docks, yet you think basic grocery delivery of lighter orders is a dream!
Cringe. You must be quite a few generations older than me to be so behind the curve. Electric vehicles are improving and becoming cheaper. It's all looking good, love that it's happening in my lifetime too.
dognobs
8 Feb 16#34
Click and collect is growing fast, the home delivery thing is going to end it is just a matter of time. I see click and collect as the future because they don't have to use retail space that can picked in a warehouse and delivered to small stores. You dont have to wait in for your shopping and they can team up with other places like amazon,ebay,argos and make it the one place collection shop. The cost in the logistics home shopping is huge however if you take that out of the equation and make them argos style the people who used to work the shop floor now become pickers, you can scrap other department staff and you would save a fortune in shop lifting.
I e mailed them about the min order as Tesco put theres up to £40 min order, which I think is wrong if you still pay the delivery and disabled people might rely on this etc and £40 is high,
Asda replied saying it depends on what area you are in weather its £25 or £40 spend.
yoshiiiii to dorey69
9 Feb 16#38
Thanks for updating this.
rdbradshaw
10 Feb 16#39
Good news now you can be a current customer and get £5.25p cashback through tcb on orders over £25
FearOne
11 Feb 16#40
The clowns delivered half my order, even subbed that and still chrged full. I now have to **** about getting a refund!
And this is supposed to save me time? !
Opening post
Some examples of less than half price items here - many more to be had with a little research:
http://groceries.asda.com/product/dishwasher-products/fairy-platinum-all-in-one-lemon-dishwasher-tablets/910000452566
http://groceries.asda.com/asda-webstore/landing/home.shtml#/product/910001932193
http://groceries.asda.com/asda-webstore/landing/home.shtml#/search/hagen
http://groceries.asda.com/asda-webstore/landing/home.shtml#/search/dove%20cream%20wash%20aloe
http://groceries.asda.com/asda-webstore/landing/home.shtml#/product/910002000640
http://groceries.asda.com/product/regular/colgate-plax-multiprotection-antibacterial-soft-mint-mouthwash/910000834555
Also look out for multi buy items etc.
http://groceries.asda.com/product/hair-styling-sprays/john-frieda-beach-blonde-sea-waves-sea-salt-spray/910001798066
Could be useful for a top up shop or to stock up on certain items without leaving the house, assuming this works.
Also, may be worth checking with your card provider account to see if you have any additional cashback when using Asda through certain cards. At least 1% should be available for most but some may be able to get more back and reduce the overall cost even more.
Free delivery offer ends 14.02.16 and is available for the first 30,500 customers.
Hope this works - please share successes if so.
Top comments
i also could share other tips as i am leaving in two weeks. ALWAYS GET MORNING DELIVERYS you are less likey to get subs or missing items.
treat the drivers with respect we are the last in line and doing a hard manual job in all weathers for just over minimum wage. remember you are getting a service with temperature controlled shopping delivered to your door for less than the price of a large letter stamp!
in all fairness i dont know how home shopping can survive it costs £15 per a customer per shop its only a matter of time before it all ends. the future is click and collect argos style shops where you just collect your picked shopping but you cant enter the shop.
All comments (41)
£25 for me too
If it is £12.50 for others on Quidco and you have already ordered through TCB you may be interested in this:
http://www.topcashback.co.uk/help/76
i also could share other tips as i am leaving in two weeks. ALWAYS GET MORNING DELIVERYS you are less likey to get subs or missing items.
treat the drivers with respect we are the last in line and doing a hard manual job in all weathers for just over minimum wage. remember you are getting a service with temperature controlled shopping delivered to your door for less than the price of a large letter stamp!
in all fairness i dont know how home shopping can survive it costs £15 per a customer per shop its only a matter of time before it all ends. the future is click and collect argos style shops where you just collect your picked shopping but you cant enter the shop.
http://www.topcashback.co.uk/help/55
The future will be electric vehicles and home delivery boxes at residences so that customers don't need to be at home. Delivery cost will be reduced per customer as the uptake will be greater and deliveries can be organised per street. Boxes at homes mean people can be shoehorned into slots they usually wouldn't take.
Click and collect doesn't solve the environmental issue. It's merely a stop gap.
Refrigerated delivery boxes for homes are already under way and being invested by the industry. A Dutch company is bringing it.
Comparing something mundane like grocery delivery to flying saucers or even thinking it's not feasible is hilariously out of touch. Not only will it be the norm, it will become increasingly inexpensive as automation takes over.
Amazon are even investing in full cargo automation at docks, yet you think basic grocery delivery of lighter orders is a dream!
Cringe. You must be quite a few generations older than me to be so behind the curve. Electric vehicles are improving and becoming cheaper. It's all looking good, love that it's happening in my lifetime too.
It's coming and it is the future.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/retailandconsumer/12096740/sainsburys-home-retail-group-argos-homebase-mike-coupe-takeover-explained.html
https://www.topcashback.co.uk/help/87
Asda replied saying it depends on what area you are in weather its £25 or £40 spend.
And this is supposed to save me time? !