Combine with some of Sainsbury's deals to take full advantage of these discounts including on home, toys/Lego, personal and electrical items as well as your usual grocery items, for example:
Babyliss Curl Secret Stylist 2667u reduced to £84 from £120 so could be £68, Bosch Kitchen Machine MUM4807GB reduced to £60 from £120 so could be £44, Russell Hobbs Purifry reduced to £90 from £150 so could be £74, Highstreet TV Nutribullet reduced to £75 from £85 so could be £59 and Tefal Freemove Cordless Steam Iron FV9965 reduced to £70 from £90 so could be £54 using the discount, stock permitting.
Don't forget using a cashback credit card and/or any incentives via credit cards/bank cards could save even more and boost Nectar points.
Hope this helps some.
SCPPTNFBM = 18 off 60
- Rom
Top comments
ggss to hewittinspain
28 Feb 167#13
better quality at sainsburys
jojo_1074
28 Feb 164#11
I did this last week and tbh I was pleasantly surprised with the prices - they aren't a lot different from asda and you would definitely still be saving with this voucher as I did
kelsbels12
28 Feb 163#7
love sainsburys. heat for me. ty op
nandito
28 Feb 163#6
Thanks yoshiiiii. My friend has been looking for a Babyliss Secret curler so this will be good for her. Don't think Asda sell them.
All comments (55)
hewittinspain
28 Feb 162#1
still probably cheaper at Asda. cold for me for the fact Sainsburys are expensive.
yoshiiiii to hewittinspain
28 Feb 161#2
Fair enough. Everyone is entitled to their own opinion.
ggss to hewittinspain
28 Feb 167#13
better quality at sainsburys
mcormack to hewittinspain
28 Feb 161#20
The quality at Sainsbury's is far superior to that of Asda.
ikskwizituk
28 Feb 16#3
Sainsbury's is a rip off, could do the same shop twice over elsewhere
ikskwizituk
28 Feb 16#4
Sainsbury's is a rip off, could do the same shop twice over elsewhere
yoshiiiii to ikskwizituk
28 Feb 162#5
That's great!
nandito
28 Feb 163#6
Thanks yoshiiiii. My friend has been looking for a Babyliss Secret curler so this will be good for her. Don't think Asda sell them.
If you spend under £100, you can also take advantage of £16 off your order when you spend £60 - click here to redeem with discount code CATNNSLCEJ - until 7 May 2016.
To redeem, head to the Sainsbury's website and enter the voucher code at the checkout.
The discount is only valid on spends at £60 or more. Home delivery varies from £1-£6.
For more ways to save at Sainsbury's, visit our Sainsbury's voucher codes page.
Can't try myself as not a new customer.
afnoor
28 Feb 161#9
I love sainsbury desserts so heat from me
jojo_1074
28 Feb 164#11
I did this last week and tbh I was pleasantly surprised with the prices - they aren't a lot different from asda and you would definitely still be saving with this voucher as I did
kelsbels12
28 Feb 162#12
asda are crap for meat, fruit n veg. love sainsburys fruit n veg last ages while I find asda's don't! cheap n cheerful for some I guess.
rdbradshaw to kelsbels12
28 Feb 161#17
Also finding a child parking space at asda is a joke , always folk parking there with no children with em and at sainsburys always get a space no problem .
lewsca
28 Feb 162#14
Just re register with a new email address. I've been doing this for as long as these offers have been running. Works every time. I got £75 of shopping delivered yesterday for £44. This was a mixture of deals and the £18 off.
coopern1
28 Feb 161#15
Sainsburys all the way .... We can't eat asda own food - it's awful!! Online shop fab aswell ... Pretty much everything's always in stock, fresh with good sell by dates.... And with 1 hour slots - just pick the £1 delivery slots ! Not sure I'd re reg a new email address tho to get this offer but heat if you're a new customer :smiley:
hewittinspain
28 Feb 16#16
im talking about everyday brands. Heinz beans dont taste better at Sainsburys then they do at Asda. Meat I buy local at the butchers but for bread and typical groceries Asda are generally cheaper on an overall shop
lovevelvet
28 Feb 16#18
Sainsbury's are the best for fresh fish, especially as Morrisons tell me their fish is 6 days old!
miffyl
28 Feb 16#19
What's the image for the deal? Can't work it out.
pops1975
28 Feb 16#21
Cant check out with the Curl Secret, says the offer/product no longer exists.
mandshotbargains
28 Feb 16#22
Just tried the £16 code and it's expired. :disappointed:
mandshotbargains
28 Feb 16#23
SCPPTNFBM I used this code. Ordered the curl secret for £67 delivered. :smile:
B0rker to mandshotbargains
28 Feb 161#25
You're a total star cheers. I'd spent 30 minutes trying to work out how to spend £60 on food shopping (usually spend £25 a week in aldi!) only to find out the other code had expired.
therealjohnpeat
28 Feb 161#24
That's the funniest thing I've EVER read here - seriously - that you think it's relevant, useful, meaningful is an absolute hoot.
rdbradshaw
28 Feb 16#26
All adds up as in you use more petrol looping around the asda car park trying to find a space that doesn't exist , other factors are that some offers at certain times are better at sainsburys than other places and 1 reason why asda is cheaper because the majority of stock is closer to use by / best before .
savyshopper2015
28 Feb 16#27
Someone I know working inside M&S bakery buys sainsburys bakery products and packs them in M&S packaging and sells them on more fo what they paid,sainsburys quality taste
Rom
28 Feb 16#28
Lol
spenspuma
28 Feb 162#29
Shouldnt even be a 'thing' this parent spaces. Absolute farce. What on earth qualifies someone to think they should get special treatment because they've been daft enough to have kids?
Still prefer sainsburys the service is also great compared to Asda. I find sainsburys quite reasonable on the brands that I buy, and on occasions they actually have better deals. Not to mention nectar point etc... Also meat from sainsburys so much better and if you have to return anything they are fantastic... Asda delivered me meat with an expired date and it was such a hassle to get a refund.
rdbradshaw
28 Feb 16#31
I'm not daft to have kids, also I do shop at asda but at the bank holidays times of year it's far less busy at sainsburys so we go there and yes it may cost a little more but it's a lot less stressful and that can make the difference
paypeanuts
28 Feb 16#32
Please tell me you're not allowed to vote.
ApolloX1
28 Feb 16#33
CATNNSLCEJ doesn't seem to be working.
yoshiiiii
28 Feb 16#34
Others have commented on that too but someone had success with SCPPTNFBM.
Rickardo
28 Feb 16#35
You're obviously daft for not having any so you can take advantage, plus claim child benefit etc etc!
Seriously, though, you tried opening doors to get kids in to car seats in most standard spaces.
scnickr
28 Feb 161#36
Are you having a laugh or just trying to wind people up?
Ok I'll tell you what....I'll park next to you next time and get my daughter out of her car seat and make up her push chair. If I damage your car you then have no right to complain.
tariq3877
29 Feb 16#37
Useless piece if garbage. Extremely dangerous hair stuck inside and there is no emergency stop feature and release button.
Must be banned
spenspuma
29 Feb 161#38
So..you're saying you don't have the ability to park anywhere without damaging other people's property?
That's pretty lame and embarrassing imho.
How on earth do you get on in Cinema car parks...b&q...public car parks etc...do you go around damaging everyone's car just because the car park owners aren't gullible enough to have parent spaces.
It really is quite pathetic.
If you can't park up without damaging other people's property then you probably shouldn't be driving a car.
spenspuma
29 Feb 161#39
Yep...and I'd vote against parent spaces for sure. It's absolute madness that parents cannot get out of a car without damaging other people's property. How do you get on in other car parks?
Gollywood
29 Feb 16#40
Angry people...
scnickr
29 Feb 161#41
And THAT's your argument? Well done. That's just laughable. Actually made me lol.
I'm saying that without the extra space, you can't get a child out and safely put them in a pushchair. You seem to think it's about parking closer to the shop. It's not. It's about the extra space. If supermarkets put the spaces at the back of the car park, that would suit me too.
How would you expect someone to erect a pushchair when someone is parked about one foot away? How would you expect someone to open a door fully when someone is parked about one foot away?
UNLESS YOU'VE TRIED TO DO THESE YOURSELF YOUR OPINION MEANS NOTHING.
And it's not about "parking up" without damaging someone's car, it's about unloading the car safely. Nothing to do with the ability to park you moron.
spenspuma
29 Feb 16#42
I (re) refer you back to my original question (of which you've conveniently ignored)
If it is so impossible/difficult...how do you get on in the majority of other car parks which have no parent spaces? Ie Public car parks..cinemas..public events..dentist..doctors.etc etc etc.
Yes it may not be perfect...but big diddums. Life ain't perfect and ain't easy.
So I say again...if you can't get your little darling out the car without damaging others people's property then quite frankly you shouldn't be driving a car.
But we all know you CAN get the child out safely as you have to do it in other car parks...so it's basically a question of 'convenience' isn't it...to which my questioning on this subject is, why should YOU be granted a better more convenient space just because you have a child.
What next...closer spaces for Gingers so they don't feel people are staring at their hair on the long walk in? Or fat people as they can't get out their cars without swinging their doors open as they're so big? Maybe women should get closer spaces as they have more chance of an accident going over in their heels on the way in?
It all starts to get out of hand doesn't it if everyone wants a bit of the pie.
We all know the ONLY reason supermarkets do it is for fear of losing customers to places that DO provide these silly spaces.
Da11as
29 Feb 161#43
The idea of large supermarkets/shopping complex comes with the luxury of large car parks to accommodate hundreds of customers cars. Specialised parking bays were designed for people with disabilities for obvious reasons, and parking bays for parents with babies and young children were designed for safety reasons.
Mothers with young children will enter and exit a supermarket with one, two or more excited screaming children in hand, they will also have a pram in their possession, add this to the large supermarket trolley the mother will need to control. It isn't an easy job when trying to do the weekly shop, having the wider car park bay makes life safer for the family when exiting and entering the car, both sides of the parking bay can easily accommodate the pram, the shopping trolley and the screaming kids, while mother safely puts baby in car.
The fact that other parking areas do not accommodate larger parking bays for parents with children is besides the point, small shops and town areas do not have the luxury of huge car parks like supermarkets do (that is just one benefit of a large supermarket, shopping complex).
spenspuma
29 Feb 16#44
So I will ask for a 3rd (4th) time....how do these 'parents' manage to get their kids in and out of their cars in other car parks?
It's ALL about convenience (for the parents) and ALL about fear of losing customers (for the supermarket)
If it was a 'real world' problem..then EVERY car park would have to provide parent spaces by law.
Da11as
29 Feb 16#45
In an ideal world it 'would' be law for all car parks to accommodate mother child parking bays, even for the small car parks, and town car parks. But! its not, the small car parks could not accommodate such a task, that is why only the large car parks can offer this option for the parent...
Its not in fear of loosing customers, its because the larger supermarkets can, all due to the super-duper large car parks they have (design and comfort).
This is one of the problems why people arrive back at their vehicles to see a door ding/dump, the smaller car parks are prone for this sort of behaviour, all due to not enough room for certain situations. Its not necessary mothers and children, its also couples with large objects/products they are loading into their vehicles.
Large supermarkets have the room to accommodate parent parking bays, small towns do not... its that simple, no hidden extras, no paranoia for yourself to worry about. :laughing:
scnickr
29 Feb 16#46
I read the first paragraph and got bored.
You clearly don't get it which is fine.
Life goes on.
I still have my massive parent and child parking space which you can't use.
Thank you and goodbye.
spenspuma
29 Feb 16#47
I use the 'large' Parent spaces all the time..it stops my nice car getting damaged by careless parents. lol
spenspuma
29 Feb 16#48
Add that to the list..
'People with large items parking space'.
scnickr
1 Mar 16#49
Carry on. Please do. They're starting to enforce parking rules so I hope you get a ticket.
Bye.
spenspuma
1 Mar 16#50
Its not enforceable in a court of law.
Sorry.
scnickr
1 Mar 16#51
If you say so.
spenspuma to scnickr
1 Mar 16#52
Nowt to do with my say so.
Rom
1 Mar 16#53
Voucher expired?
...
SCPPTNFBM 18 off 60
cambourne03 to Rom
4 Mar 16#55
Thank you for that.
pops1975
3 Mar 16#54
Damn it, my order for the secet curler was cancelled - not stock and was due to collect today.... gutted.
Opening post
Babyliss Curl Secret Stylist 2667u reduced to £84 from £120 so could be £68, Bosch Kitchen Machine MUM4807GB reduced to £60 from £120 so could be £44, Russell Hobbs Purifry reduced to £90 from £150 so could be £74, Highstreet TV Nutribullet reduced to £75 from £85 so could be £59 and Tefal Freemove Cordless Steam Iron FV9965 reduced to £70 from £90 so could be £54 using the discount, stock permitting.
Don't forget using a cashback credit card and/or any incentives via credit cards/bank cards could save even more and boost Nectar points.
Hope this helps some.
SCPPTNFBM = 18 off 60
- Rom
Top comments
All comments (55)
If you spend under £100, you can also take advantage of £16 off your order when you spend £60 - click here to redeem with discount code CATNNSLCEJ - until 7 May 2016.
To redeem, head to the Sainsbury's website and enter the voucher code at the checkout.
The discount is only valid on spends at £60 or more. Home delivery varies from £1-£6.
For more ways to save at Sainsbury's, visit our Sainsbury's voucher codes page.
Can't try myself as not a new customer.
Disabled spaces YES..but parent spaces? Absolute joke.
Seriously, though, you tried opening doors to get kids in to car seats in most standard spaces.
Ok I'll tell you what....I'll park next to you next time and get my daughter out of her car seat and make up her push chair. If I damage your car you then have no right to complain.
Must be banned
That's pretty lame and embarrassing imho.
How on earth do you get on in Cinema car parks...b&q...public car parks etc...do you go around damaging everyone's car just because the car park owners aren't gullible enough to have parent spaces.
It really is quite pathetic.
If you can't park up without damaging other people's property then you probably shouldn't be driving a car.
I'm saying that without the extra space, you can't get a child out and safely put them in a pushchair. You seem to think it's about parking closer to the shop. It's not. It's about the extra space. If supermarkets put the spaces at the back of the car park, that would suit me too.
How would you expect someone to erect a pushchair when someone is parked about one foot away? How would you expect someone to open a door fully when someone is parked about one foot away?
UNLESS YOU'VE TRIED TO DO THESE YOURSELF YOUR OPINION MEANS NOTHING.
And it's not about "parking up" without damaging someone's car, it's about unloading the car safely. Nothing to do with the ability to park you moron.
If it is so impossible/difficult...how do you get on in the majority of other car parks which have no parent spaces? Ie Public car parks..cinemas..public events..dentist..doctors.etc etc etc.
Yes it may not be perfect...but big diddums. Life ain't perfect and ain't easy.
So I say again...if you can't get your little darling out the car without damaging others people's property then quite frankly you shouldn't be driving a car.
But we all know you CAN get the child out safely as you have to do it in other car parks...so it's basically a question of 'convenience' isn't it...to which my questioning on this subject is, why should YOU be granted a better more convenient space just because you have a child.
What next...closer spaces for Gingers so they don't feel people are staring at their hair on the long walk in? Or fat people as they can't get out their cars without swinging their doors open as they're so big? Maybe women should get closer spaces as they have more chance of an accident going over in their heels on the way in?
It all starts to get out of hand doesn't it if everyone wants a bit of the pie.
We all know the ONLY reason supermarkets do it is for fear of losing customers to places that DO provide these silly spaces.
Mothers with young children will enter and exit a supermarket with one, two or more excited screaming children in hand, they will also have a pram in their possession, add this to the large supermarket trolley the mother will need to control. It isn't an easy job when trying to do the weekly shop, having the wider car park bay makes life safer for the family when exiting and entering the car, both sides of the parking bay can easily accommodate the pram, the shopping trolley and the screaming kids, while mother safely puts baby in car.
The fact that other parking areas do not accommodate larger parking bays for parents with children is besides the point, small shops and town areas do not have the luxury of huge car parks like supermarkets do (that is just one benefit of a large supermarket, shopping complex).
It's ALL about convenience (for the parents) and ALL about fear of losing customers (for the supermarket)
If it was a 'real world' problem..then EVERY car park would have to provide parent spaces by law.
Its not in fear of loosing customers, its because the larger supermarkets can, all due to the super-duper large car parks they have (design and comfort).
This is one of the problems why people arrive back at their vehicles to see a door ding/dump, the smaller car parks are prone for this sort of behaviour, all due to not enough room for certain situations. Its not necessary mothers and children, its also couples with large objects/products they are loading into their vehicles.
Large supermarkets have the room to accommodate parent parking bays, small towns do not... its that simple, no hidden extras, no paranoia for yourself to worry about. :laughing:
You clearly don't get it which is fine.
Life goes on.
I still have my massive parent and child parking space which you can't use.
Thank you and goodbye.
'People with large items parking space'.
Bye.
Sorry.
...
SCPPTNFBM 18 off 60
Price also rocketed to £120.00.