All Back Market codes
Expired Back Market Codes
These have passed their expiry date but may still work at checkout.
Expired
Likely expired on: 12th Sep 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 25th Jun 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 5th Dec 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 21st Sep 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 14th Oct 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 28th Oct 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 21st Sep 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 27th Sep 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 6th January
Back Market market overview
The UK refurbished electronics market has grown considerably as consumers weigh upgrade costs against tighter household budgets, and Back Market occupies a strong position in that space - arguably the most recognisable consumer-facing refurb marketplace in Western Europe. Its main domestic competitors are Musicmagpie and Envirofone for phones, Amazon Renewed for broader electronics, and the informal secondhand market via eBay. Back Market's differentiation is its marketplace structure with quality controls, which sits between the rough-and-ready nature of eBay and the higher-priced certainty of buying renewed through Amazon. Average order values in the refurb smartphone segment typically sit in the £200-£500 range, depending on model and condition grade chosen.
The category is moderately competitive but not especially consolidated - no single player commands an overwhelming share of UK refurb electronics. Back Market's competitive moat is its breadth of seller network and the trust layer it builds over the top of it. Repeat purchase rates in this category are structurally lower than, say, fashion retail, because smartphones and laptops are infrequent purchases; customer acquisition costs are therefore significant, which partly explains the platform's investment in discount codes and referral-style promotions to drive first orders.
Pricing architecture follows condition grading rather than seasonal markdown cycles, which means the site doesn't operate with the same promotional cadence as a traditional retailer. Discount codes and limited promotional windows - such as the two currently live on CodeHut - tend to be the primary lever for price-sensitive shoppers rather than broad sitewide sales. Channel mix skews heavily towards organic search and price-comparison traffic, with affiliate and voucher-code sites representing a meaningful share of first-time customer acquisition.
About Back Market
Back Market sells refurbished electronics - phones, laptops, tablets, headphones, consoles - sourced from professional refurbishers and sold through a marketplace model. You're not buying from Back Market directly; you're buying from one of the vetted third-party sellers it hosts, with Back Market acting as a quality gatekeeper and customer service safety net. That distinction matters in practice, because fulfilment speed and packaging quality can vary slightly depending on which refurbisher ships your order.
The pitch is simple: certified-refurbished devices at meaningfully lower prices than new, with a warranty baked in. iPhones that would retail at £800 new might appear here at £400-odd, in "Good" or "Excellent" condition grades with photos showing actual cosmetic state. The grading system is one of Back Market's stronger features - it's more granular and honest than the vague "grade A" labels you'll find on eBay listings. Every device comes with at least a one-year warranty and a 30-day money-back window, which removes most of the risk that usually makes buying secondhand feel precarious.
The weaknesses are real, though. Stock is unpredictable - a specific colour and storage combination you want may simply not be available, and it won't be tomorrow either. Delivery times vary by seller, so if you're expecting Amazon-style consistency, temper expectations. Some users also report that the returns process, while technically sound, involves more back-and-forth than dealing with a single retailer would.
Its closest UK competitors are Musicmagpie, Envirofone, and CEX for phones; for broader electronics refurb, Amazon Renewed competes on convenience and trust signals. Back Market tends to win on selection breadth and the cleanliness of its grading system. It loses to Amazon Renewed on delivery reliability and to Musicmagpie on sheer simplicity. CEX is cheaper but the in-store-first model and short warranties put it in a different category for most buyers.
There's no loyalty programme or subscription tier. No points, no VIP perks. The value proposition is entirely transactional: you pay less for a working device, you're protected for a year, end of arrangement. That's not a criticism - plenty of people would rather have a lower upfront price than accumulate points they'll forget about.
Delivery is free on most orders, which takes the sting out of not having a Prime-style subscription. The 30-day returns policy is a genuine differentiator in the refurb space, where many competitors offer 14 days or less. There's currently a free P&P plus 30-day returns offer running, so no need to calculate postage anxiety into your decision.
Verdict: Back Market is genuinely worth using if you're buying a smartphone, tablet, or laptop and would rather not pay new prices for marginal improvements. It's less suited to impulse purchases - the stock variability means you need a degree of flexibility. If you need a specific configuration by Tuesday, buy it new elsewhere. If you're willing to wait a day or two and can live without the latest model's exact colourway, this is probably where you should be shopping.
How to use a Back Market discount code
- Browse to the device you want and add it to your basket in the usual way - select your condition grade first, as codes sometimes apply only to certain tiers.
- Head to your basket (the icon top-right) and review your order. Don't skip past this page; it's where you check the seller rating and estimated delivery window before committing.
- Proceed to checkout. You'll be prompted to sign in or create a free account if you haven't already - codes typically require you to be logged in.
- On the payment page, look for a field labelled "Promo code" or "Discount code". It won't auto-apply; you need to type or paste your code in and hit the apply button separately.
- Check the order summary updates to reflect the discount before entering payment details. If the total doesn't change, the code hasn't applied - common reasons are listed in the FAQ below.
- Complete payment. The confirmation email should show the discounted total; keep that email in case of any query with the seller later.
Back Market shopping tips
- Understand the condition grades before you buy. Back Market's grading runs from "Fair" (visible marks, fully functional) through "Good" to "Excellent" (near-pristine). The price difference between grades is often surprisingly small - check whether bumping up a tier is worth a few extra pounds for your peace of mind.
- Act on expiring codes promptly. Two of the currently listed codes are due to expire within the next week. Back Market's promotional cadence tends to be sparse - there are only 2 active deals on the page right now - so if a code fits your order, don't assume an equivalent will reappear next month.
- Check the individual seller rating, not just the platform. Each listing shows the refurbisher's own rating and number of completed orders. A seller with 10,000 orders and a 4.8 rating is a different proposition from one with 200 orders and a 4.2. It takes 30 seconds to check and it matters.
- Students should check the dedicated student discount. There's currently a £20 student discount available, which is one of the more straightforward verified-discount schemes in the refurb category. You'll typically need to verify through a student verification service - worth doing before checkout rather than hunting for it at payment stage.
- Compare the same device across multiple sellers on the site. Back Market often lists the same model from several refurbishers at different price points and condition ratings. The search defaults to the cheapest, but filtering by seller rating sometimes surfaces better value at a marginal price increase.
- Factor in the warranty carefully. The standard one-year warranty is better than most secondhand alternatives, but it's handled via the seller, not Back Market directly. Note the seller's location - UK-based refurbishers typically mean faster warranty resolution than those shipping from mainland Europe.
- Big sale events can yield genuine savings. Black Friday and January sales tend to produce the sharpest discounts in the refurb electronics category broadly. Back Market participates, and devices that are already discounted from new can drop further - worth bookmarking a wishlist in advance rather than making a rushed decision in the sale window.
Back Market promotions FAQs
Saving at Back Market
The best Back Market discounts can deliver genuine savings at the checkout. Check back regularly as new codes are added frequently.
Reviewed by
Jon Pope ChMC, CodeHut Editor · Last checked 1 week ago
Last updated:
Similar stores to Back Market