£40 giftcard at Waitrose or John Lewis after two £100 pound shops at Waitrose by December 4th. FOR NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY.
Top comments
Turnip
30 Oct 1614#5
Easy to spend £100 at Waitrose. A 4pk of baked beans, a box of teabags and a tube of toothpaste. Total £100... :smirk:
jamesakabob
30 Oct 1610#18
You do know that you're supposed to take the packaging off first right?
IamWill to Turnip
30 Oct 166#6
4pk of natural goodness gently smoked hint of gold fragranced (for the next day) baked beans £45
Passed through (the brand refers to the lemur digested nature of this product) loose leaf tea, bagged in Peruvian caterpillar silk extruded enclosures for convenience, £50.
Colgate toothpaste, £5
Done :smiley:
bonzobanana
30 Oct 163#17
I buy at Waitrose sometimes. At the moment they are giving me £8 off £40 vouchers at the checkout.
It's not a cheap shop overall but there are ways of getting very good value you need to get a waitrose loyalty card.
Free coffee and newspaper if you spend £10 or over.
You can select 20% off about 10 items using mywaitrose youroffers. It's only a subset but can combine it with other offers if you are careful.
Often many reductions in store.
Essential range overs good value.
Normal great offers to entice customers like any other supermarket.
What you don't do is go in and buy their normal mid range or high quality stuff or branded goods at normal price. So if your the type of person who makes a list and just goes in for those products its not for you. If you shop open to trying different stuff for meals based on offers etc then it can be great value.
In a way this has the same limitation as Lidl and Aldi in that the range is limited. Here the range is limited because you simply won't pay the price of some of their goods. For me Lidl is limited (don't have aldi) because the range is slightly limited and some products I find very poor quality.
I tend to only go to Waitrose when I have a voucher or I'm spending just over £10 so I get the free paper and coffee.
Latest comments (23)
Demps
31 Oct 16#21
20% off shop is very good
speric07 to Demps
1 Nov 16#23
You'll get yourself banned with comments like that!
androoski
31 Oct 16#22
I do use Aldi and Lidl but I can't rely on it for all shopping. It's good to go in there and pick out the good stuff and the real value and leave the rubbish behind (and I've picked up some REALLY BAD stuff in Aldi and Lidl as well as some really good stuff). I can then go to the other supermarkets (Waitrose included) and cherry pick the good stuff and the stuff I can't get elsewhere. I'd never get near £100 in Waitrose though.
Heat added, because £40 in John Lewis would come in handy for a christmas item.
cheznconrad123
31 Oct 16#20
Thanks op
cw018666
30 Oct 16#19
does this include baby milk formula?
jamesakabob
30 Oct 1610#18
You do know that you're supposed to take the packaging off first right?
bonzobanana
30 Oct 163#17
I buy at Waitrose sometimes. At the moment they are giving me £8 off £40 vouchers at the checkout.
It's not a cheap shop overall but there are ways of getting very good value you need to get a waitrose loyalty card.
Free coffee and newspaper if you spend £10 or over.
You can select 20% off about 10 items using mywaitrose youroffers. It's only a subset but can combine it with other offers if you are careful.
Often many reductions in store.
Essential range overs good value.
Normal great offers to entice customers like any other supermarket.
What you don't do is go in and buy their normal mid range or high quality stuff or branded goods at normal price. So if your the type of person who makes a list and just goes in for those products its not for you. If you shop open to trying different stuff for meals based on offers etc then it can be great value.
In a way this has the same limitation as Lidl and Aldi in that the range is limited. Here the range is limited because you simply won't pay the price of some of their goods. For me Lidl is limited (don't have aldi) because the range is slightly limited and some products I find very poor quality.
I tend to only go to Waitrose when I have a voucher or I'm spending just over £10 so I get the free paper and coffee.
franconormand
29 Oct 161#2
Needs to be added--
This is new customers only
JABBERWOC to franconormand
30 Oct 16#16
Ta. Done.
strowger
30 Oct 161#15
Pretty permanent £5-£10 for Waitrose at Quidco or TCB too - my two orders tracked at £10 (for first/new customer purchase) and £4 (for second purchase).
Also worth noting that John Lewis and Waitrose are the only supermarket which allow their gift cards/vouchers to be redeemed online when ordering delivery - and these are available at a discount to quite a lot of people through their employers' partner schemes - mine sells £100 Waitrose vouchers for a bit under £95.
You can "choose your offers" at Waitrose too, obviously most stuff eligible is waaay overpriced but there is the odd thing that's competitive.
Receipt for second delivery had a note that I'd qualified for the £40 card.
So I reckon I've paid £140 for £200 of Waitrose stuff.
That's still crap compared to Lidl for ordinary groceries, but if you pick what you order carefully then you can save good money at this. They are, for example, competitive for spirits and for some "branded" stuff (marmite...) even before any offers.
doritos
30 Oct 162#14
I'm happy mixing it up with the plebs at Aldi.
Cameron92
30 Oct 16#13
Given the high prices at Waitrose this deal leaves you no better off than just doing two shops at any of the other big supermarkets where you can probably get the £100 of goods for £80 or less.
airfix
30 Oct 16#12
We have a Partnership credit card and always spend on it, you get cashback as vouchers, just recieved £35 worth in the post.
vwblack
30 Oct 161#9
Challenge yourself to buy at Aldi or Lidl and enjoy the savings
donkey_spotter to vwblack
30 Oct 16#11
I prefer food that doesn't taste of plastic
Turnip
30 Oct 16#10
See I was right! :smile:
CharlesCalthrop
30 Oct 16#8
Enough cashback to get a swan grinder...
robodan918
30 Oct 16#7
20 percent back isn't bad. I'd prefer discount up front though
Heat anyway
Turnip
30 Oct 1614#5
Easy to spend £100 at Waitrose. A 4pk of baked beans, a box of teabags and a tube of toothpaste. Total £100... :smirk:
IamWill to Turnip
30 Oct 166#6
4pk of natural goodness gently smoked hint of gold fragranced (for the next day) baked beans £45
Passed through (the brand refers to the lemur digested nature of this product) loose leaf tea, bagged in Peruvian caterpillar silk extruded enclosures for convenience, £50.
Colgate toothpaste, £5
Done :smiley:
retrosling
30 Oct 16#4
Can this be used in conjunction with other offers?
Opening post
Top comments
Passed through (the brand refers to the lemur digested nature of this product) loose leaf tea, bagged in Peruvian caterpillar silk extruded enclosures for convenience, £50.
Colgate toothpaste, £5
Done :smiley:
It's not a cheap shop overall but there are ways of getting very good value you need to get a waitrose loyalty card.
Free coffee and newspaper if you spend £10 or over.
You can select 20% off about 10 items using mywaitrose youroffers. It's only a subset but can combine it with other offers if you are careful.
Often many reductions in store.
Essential range overs good value.
Normal great offers to entice customers like any other supermarket.
What you don't do is go in and buy their normal mid range or high quality stuff or branded goods at normal price. So if your the type of person who makes a list and just goes in for those products its not for you. If you shop open to trying different stuff for meals based on offers etc then it can be great value.
In a way this has the same limitation as Lidl and Aldi in that the range is limited. Here the range is limited because you simply won't pay the price of some of their goods. For me Lidl is limited (don't have aldi) because the range is slightly limited and some products I find very poor quality.
I tend to only go to Waitrose when I have a voucher or I'm spending just over £10 so I get the free paper and coffee.
Latest comments (23)
Heat added, because £40 in John Lewis would come in handy for a christmas item.
It's not a cheap shop overall but there are ways of getting very good value you need to get a waitrose loyalty card.
Free coffee and newspaper if you spend £10 or over.
You can select 20% off about 10 items using mywaitrose youroffers. It's only a subset but can combine it with other offers if you are careful.
Often many reductions in store.
Essential range overs good value.
Normal great offers to entice customers like any other supermarket.
What you don't do is go in and buy their normal mid range or high quality stuff or branded goods at normal price. So if your the type of person who makes a list and just goes in for those products its not for you. If you shop open to trying different stuff for meals based on offers etc then it can be great value.
In a way this has the same limitation as Lidl and Aldi in that the range is limited. Here the range is limited because you simply won't pay the price of some of their goods. For me Lidl is limited (don't have aldi) because the range is slightly limited and some products I find very poor quality.
I tend to only go to Waitrose when I have a voucher or I'm spending just over £10 so I get the free paper and coffee.
This is new customers only
Also worth noting that John Lewis and Waitrose are the only supermarket which allow their gift cards/vouchers to be redeemed online when ordering delivery - and these are available at a discount to quite a lot of people through their employers' partner schemes - mine sells £100 Waitrose vouchers for a bit under £95.
You can "choose your offers" at Waitrose too, obviously most stuff eligible is waaay overpriced but there is the odd thing that's competitive.
Receipt for second delivery had a note that I'd qualified for the £40 card.
So I reckon I've paid £140 for £200 of Waitrose stuff.
That's still crap compared to Lidl for ordinary groceries, but if you pick what you order carefully then you can save good money at this. They are, for example, competitive for spirits and for some "branded" stuff (marmite...) even before any offers.
Heat anyway
Passed through (the brand refers to the lemur digested nature of this product) loose leaf tea, bagged in Peruvian caterpillar silk extruded enclosures for convenience, £50.
Colgate toothpaste, £5
Done :smiley: