The 20 tricks experts use to save money on Amazon
20 tips, tricks and hacks that’ll transform your online retail sprees
Master the world’s biggest shopping site with these essential tips and tricks
Amazon has radically changed the way the world shops. Pretty much everyone uses the online behemoth at least a few times a year – but not everyone uses it wisely. But here at Stuff we’re all about the shopping. We spend our lives looking for great deals and testing great products – and we know how to save money when using Amazon. Want to shop smarter, and save-ier? We will train you. Read on, Grasshopper.
1. Never miss the Daily Deals
As the name suggests, these offers (which are spread across every department) are generally refreshed every 24 hours, meaning you only have a limited time to take advantage. Some deals don’t even stick around for the full day, expiring in a matter of hours of when a certain amount of stock is sold. Daily Deals is something of a lucky dip of savings: you never know what might be in there, so don’t come in expecting to find something you need. Either way, you can find them here.
2. Look for bargains among the Warehouse Deals
The Warehouse Deals section is where Amazon shifts refurbished, factory-damaged, returned and second-hand (aka “open-box and pre-owned”) products at low prices. All products are in “good condition”, thoroughly inspected/tested, and backed up with Amazon’s normal satisfaction guarantee, but fall short of Amazon’s standards for “new” and will likely lack a manufacturer’s warranty.
3. Visit the Outlet frequently
The third spot for finding heavily discounted products on Amazon is the Outlet. This is a straight-up offers/sales section with a full range of categories to comb through – including groceries, fashion, books and electronics.
4. Never miss out on special offers
If you’re less of a browser and more of a “I know what I’m after” type, it’s well worth checking out Money Saving Expert’s Amazon Discount Finder tool, which will unearth deals and reductions you might struggle to find when using Amazon’s regular search box. You can search by keyword and filter by department, category, discount percentage, and minimum and maximum price.
5. Keep track of price drops
CamelCamelCamel keeps track of product pricing for online retailers including Amazon, and its web browser extension, the Camelizer, lets you bring up all the info on the product you’re currently viewing with a single click of your mouse. That ensures you won’t shell out the big bucks on something that’s likely to drop in price again soon. And you can even set up an alert on a particular product, so Camelizer will notify you when it drops below a certain price. Ker-ching!
6. Blag yourself a refund windfall
It’s a real bummer when you buy something only for the price to plummet a day or two later. But it needn’t be that way. Amazon used to have an informal policy whereby it’d refund you the difference (in gift card form), as long as you asked within a short period of the transaction taking place. That now seems to have been quietly ditched in most cases, but in some territories – the US among them – you can still get a price-match refund on TVs. Elsewhere in the world it’s still worth emailing customer services if such a situation arises, and trying your luck. The worst that can happen is they say no.
7. Buy cheap from the EU
Before we bid the EU adieu, there’s a reasonable opportunity to pick up some cheaper products across Amazon’s EU sites. You can compare prices easily using tools like Curiua and Hagglezon, but note that the current weak pound means that digging up a bargain from abroad is going to be harder than it was before the referendum.
8. Subscribe & save
One way to save a few quid on household essentials is to use Amazon’s Subscribe & Save option. Available on thousands of products, it gives you additional savings if you receive five or more products on a single, monthly delivery date. There’s no commitment here, so if you don’t need another nine rolls of toilet paper you can remove that from your subscription ahead of time without a penalty, or set the frequency to every two or three months instead. Also, if you’re also a Prime user, you can get a further 20% off nappies when you Subscribe & Save through Amazon Family.
9. Get the Prime benefits
Umming and ahing over forking out £79 for an annual Amazon Prime membership? There’s potentially money to be saved if you do go for it, but you’ll want to do some research first. Most people will grab Prime based on the free-one-day-delivery. But that might not be a huge money saver, even if you do a lot of shopping on the site. After all, Amazon offers free (albeit not one-day) shipping on orders of £20 or more anyway. For us, it’s the additional benefits that make Prime worth considering: Prime Video (which is excellent), Amazon Music streaming, Twitch Prime access, online photo storage, access to free Kindle books, and other money-saving Amazon bits and pieces.
10. Blag some students discounts
If you’re currently in UK higher education (and can prove it to Amazon), you can sign up for Amazon Student, a service with many of the benefits of full Prime membership at a fraction of the price. For starters, you get the service – which features free one-day delivery, discounts on textbooks and other student-related products, access to Prime Video and Prime Music, and unlimited cloud photo storage – for six months entirely free-of-charge. If you don’t cancel it before the trial ends, it’ll then flip to a regular annual subscription of £39 (which is still £40 a year less than regular Prime).
11. Try Prime Reading
Prime Reading is a brand new addition to the Prime benefits line-up, bringing a rotating roster of free reading material to members. The thousands-strong library includes books (including big names like Harry Potter and Slaughterhouse Five), graphic novels and magazines. Prime members can “borrow” up to 10 items at once, accessing them via Kindle devices or iOS/Android tablets and smartphones.
12. Download free MP3s
OK, so they’re not quite ‘free’, but if you’ve bought any CDs or LPs on Amazon in the past decade or so, and have a Prime account, you can download MP3 versions for no extra cost. We tried it and were surprised to find well over 100 tracks that we could download, based off a bunch of albums we’d forgotten buying. Useful if you’ve lost your original physical albums – or given them to someone else… Check out the service here.
13. Visit Amazon Pantry
Exclusive to Prime members, Amazon Pantry is a way of receiving large boxes full of everyday essentials (household products and dry/canned/bottled groceries, mainly) at a low cost. It’s a good alternative to online shopping through your supermarket.
14. Dine in an Amazon Restaurant
Listen up, Prime subscribers with a rumbling tummy. Amazon now has its very own answer to Deliveroo or Uber Eats in the form of Amazon Restaurants: a service whereby you order food from nearby restaurants (with a bent towards good quality establishments) and have it whisked to your door within the hour. Use the code AMAZON8 at checkout to get £8 off your first order.
15. Get free money. Really
One of Prime’s better benefits is the chance to get free money to spend on Kindle books, Amazon Music and Amazon Video. Select “No rush” shipping instead of the same day/one-day option at the checkout and Amazon will give you £1 credit towards your next Kindle, Amazon Music or Amazon Video purchase. Bear in mind also that orders only need to be over £3 to give you the benefit – so if you split single large orders into several smaller ones, you’ll be able to maximise your credit rewards. Nice!
16. Spot fake reviews
Amazon’s user-written reviews are generally an asset, giving prospective buyers a sense of what to expect from a product they may purchase. However, it’s also possible for the maker of a product to flood its page with fake positive reviews in an attempt to hoodwink you into spending your money on shoddy goods. Enter product pages into online tool Fakespot to identify these rotters.
17. Make money while spending
Need a new credit card and want to make some Amazon savings along the way? Apply for the Amazon Platinum MasterCard: you’ll get a £10 voucher for starters, and then Amazon reward points when you use the card (1.5 points for every £2 spent on Amazon, 1 point for every £2 spent elsewhere). What’s more, you’ll get another £10 Amazon voucher every time you accrue 1000 reward points.
18. Set up a wish list
Save products you want but can’t afford right now on a Wish List. If these are kept to the default “Public” setting, friends and family will be able to browse them. If you’re lucky, maybe they’ll buy you something from your list as a gift, and you can do the same for them if you’re feeling generous, of course. Wish Lists (and you can make multiple lists if you want) are also a great way to keep prospective purposes organised.
19. Master the Marketplace
It pays to know the difference between the “normal” Amazon online store and Amazon Marketplace. The latter is an e-commerce platform where third-party sellers can offer their wares alongside Amazon’s own fixed-price goods, and in some cases use Amazon’s delivery service to fulfil orders. While it means you might get a price that’s cheaper than Amazon’s own, it also means that Marketplace items are not always subject to Amazon’s shipping pricing scheme, or its customer service guarantee. Bear that in mind before buying.
20: Get free Super Saver delivery
For non-Prime members, Amazon offers free Super Saver Delivering shipping on orders totalling £20 or more. That can be a mite irritating if you’re buying a product that costs £19.12, so check out this tool, which suggests items that’ll bump your basket to just the right amount.