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Expired Biscuiteers Codes
These have passed their expiry date but may still work at checkout.
Expired
Likely expired on: 11th Sep 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 8th Jun 2025
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Likely expired on: 3rd Sep 2025
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Likely expired on: 2nd Jul 2025
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Likely expired on: 28th May 2025
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Likely expired on: 12th May 2025
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Likely expired on: 7th May
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Likely expired on: 20th April
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Likely expired on: 8th April
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Likely expired on: 10th March
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Likely expired on: 4th February
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Likely expired on: 7th Dec 2025
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 12th January
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Likely expired on: 20th June
Biscuiteers market overview
Biscuiteers occupies a clearly defined niche within the UK premium food gifting market - artisan, occasion-led, and largely online. The gifting food segment broadly has grown over the past decade as e-commerce made it easier to send physical gifts without visiting a shop, and Biscuiteers has benefited from that structural shift. Direct competitors include corporate gifting specialists, luxury confectioners such as Hotel Chocolat (the dominant player in premium edible gifts by scale), and department store food halls. Against Hotel Chocolat in particular, Biscuiteers is smaller and more specialised, winning on personalisation and visual novelty where Hotel Chocolat wins on retail footprint and brand recognition.
Average order values in the premium gifting biscuit category tend to sit comfortably above mass-market alternatives - a mid-range tin can run £25-£45 before delivery, with larger or personalised commissions pushing higher. This positions impulse purchase behaviour as less common than considered, occasion-driven buying. Repeat purchase rates are meaningful but driven by the gifting calendar rather than habit - customers return for Christmas, Mother's Day, and corporate seasons rather than on any fixed cadence.
Biscuiteers' acquisition mix leans heavily on organic search, social media (the product photographs exceptionally well, which is not an accident), and word-of-mouth from gift recipients. Promotional activity concentrates around seasonal peaks, which is standard for the category. The current spread of 8 active codes and 28 deals, ranging from 10% to 15% off, suggests an active but not undisciplined discounting approach - enough to capture voucher-seeking traffic without eroding the premium positioning that justifies the price point in the first place.
About Biscuiteers
Biscuiteers makes hand-iced biscuits. That's the core of it. Each biscuit is individually decorated by hand at their London bakery, boxed in illustrated tins or bags, and sold as gifts for birthdays, weddings, corporate orders, and approximately every occasion the British calendar can throw at you. There's also an icing café experience in London where you can decorate your own, though most people are here for the postal gifts.
The product is genuinely beautiful. If you've received one of their tins, you'll know the quality is obvious the moment you open the box - these aren't the kind of thing you'd buy from a supermarket shelf and try to pass off. The biscuits themselves taste decent (buttery shortbread, reliably pleasant), but the design work is the real reason people pay what they pay. Theming ranges from classic florals and gardening collections to pop culture tie-ins and fully bespoke corporate commissions.
The honest weakness? Price. Biscuiteers sits firmly at the premium end of the gifting market, and some of the collections - particularly the larger tins - feel expensive even by luxury gift standards. If you need to send something that looks thoughtful without a second mortgage, there are cheaper entry points, but the basket can climb quickly once you start customising. Delivery costs, too, are worth watching before you commit at checkout.
The main competitors are outfits like Konditor, Fortnum & Mason's gift food range, and various artisan bakeries with gifting arms. Against those, Biscuiteers wins on the sheer breadth of themed collections and the ease of personalisation online. They lose points, arguably, if you prioritise eating the thing over displaying it - for pure biscuit quality, smaller independent bakers might edge them out.
Biscuiteers runs a loyalty programme called the Biscuiteers Rewards Club. Points accumulate on purchases and can be redeemed against future orders. There's also a referral mechanic - introducing a friend earns both parties a reward, which is a straightforward enough scheme. The newsletter is genuinely useful here: sign-up codes are available, and subscribers tend to hear about seasonal promotions before anyone else.
On delivery: standard UK delivery is available, with tracked and next-day options at additional cost. Gift packaging is very much built into the product rather than a bolt-on - the tins and boxes are part of the point - but check the product page for lead times on bespoke or personalised orders, which can take longer than a standard stock item. At present, CodeHut lists 8 active voucher codes and 28 deals for Biscuiteers, with discounts running from 10% to 15% off. The 15% tier is the most commonly available. Three codes are expiring within the next week, so if you're sitting on a saved tab, now would be the time to act.
Who should shop here? Anyone buying an occasion gift who wants something that doesn't need explaining. Biscuiteers tins are self-evidently special, which matters when you're sending a gift and won't be there to see it opened. Who shouldn't bother? Casual biscuit buyers, anyone who finds the packaging wasteful, or anyone primarily interested in value for money on the biscuit itself.
How to use a Biscuiteers discount code
- Browse the site and add your chosen products to the basket. Personalised or bespoke items may require you to complete a customisation step before they're added.
- When you're ready, click the basket icon and proceed to checkout. You'll need to either log in to your account or continue as a guest.
- On the checkout page, look for a field labelled "Promo code" or "Discount code" - it's typically below the order summary on the right-hand side, or beneath your item list on mobile.
- Type or paste your code into the box exactly as it appears. Biscuiteers codes are case-sensitive, so avoid adding extra spaces or changing the capitalisation.
- Hit "Apply" - the discount does not apply automatically. The updated total should appear immediately. If it doesn't update, the code may be expired or incompatible with the items in your basket.
- Complete the rest of checkout as normal. Double-check the final total before entering payment details to confirm the discount has been deducted.
Biscuiteers shopping tips
- Act on expiring codes now. Three of the current codes on this page are expiring within the week. Biscuiteers' promotional windows do close without extension, so if you've been browsing, don't assume the code will still be there on Friday.
- The newsletter sign-up code is a reliable first-order saving. Biscuiteers typically offers a discount to new email subscribers. If you're buying for the first time, it costs nothing to sign up before you checkout - you'll likely find a first-order code arrives quickly.
- Check the 15% tier before settling for 10%. The most common discount available right now is 15% off, and on a higher-value tin, that's a meaningful difference. Scan all active codes before applying the first one you find.
- Bespoke and personalised orders have longer lead times. If you're ordering for a specific date - a wedding, a birthday - factor in additional production time for any customised pieces. Standard stock items ship faster. Don't assume the same lead time applies across the range.
- The Rewards Club is worth joining if you're a repeat buyer. Points accumulate on every order and can offset future purchases. It's not the most generous loyalty scheme in retail, but for anyone ordering corporate gifts or buying for multiple occasions a year, it adds up.
- Referrals earn points on both sides. If a friend is also considering an order, use the referral mechanic - both parties receive a reward. It's not huge, but it's free money sitting on the table.
- Seasonal collections sell out. The themed collections - Christmas, Easter, Valentine's - are genuinely popular and stock doesn't always get replenished once it's gone. If there's a specific design you want for a particular event, buying early is not paranoia, it's experience.
- Corporate orders are a separate channel. If you're buying in volume for an office or event, the corporate gifting page often has different pricing and minimum order arrangements. Worth looking at before you start manually adding 40 individual tins to a basket.
Biscuiteers promotions FAQs
Saving at Biscuiteers
The best Biscuiteers discounts typically offer between 10% and 15% off. Check back regularly as new codes are added frequently.
Reviewed by
Jon Pope ChMC, CodeHut Editor · Last checked 1 week ago
Last updated:
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