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Expired Celtic & Co. Codes
These have passed their expiry date but may still work at checkout.
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Likely expired on: 7th June
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Likely expired on: 17th June
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Likely expired on: 2nd January
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Likely expired on: 23rd Nov 2025
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Likely expired on: 21st February
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Likely expired on: 9th March
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Likely expired on: 30th Jun 2025
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Likely expired on: 30th Jun 2025
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 13th June
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 17th June
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Likely expired on: 9th May
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Likely expired on: 17th June
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Likely expired on: 17th June
Celtic & Co. market overview
Celtic & Co. operates in the premium natural-fibre clothing segment - a sub-market that sits well above the high street but below true luxury heritage brands. Its closest competitive set includes Seasalt Cornwall (which targets a similar demographic but at a lower average price point), Brora (cashmere-led, more premium), and Lakeland Leather (overlapping on outerwear and footwear). The British premium independent clothing market is modestly consolidated: a handful of well-established brands compete for a relatively loyal, older-skewing customer base that prioritises quality and provenance over trend velocity. Celtic & Co. competes on the strength of its Cornish identity and natural-fibre specialism rather than on breadth of range.
Average order values in this segment tend to run meaningfully higher than the high street - a single knitwear purchase or pair of sheepskin boots can easily represent the entire basket. This means promotional mechanics matter disproportionately: a 15% code on a £200 order is a more significant saving than the percentage suggests, which explains why the most common discount currently listed is 15% off. Promotional cadence follows a fairly predictable seasonal rhythm - Black Friday, post-Christmas clearance, and mid-season sale windows - with codes and percentage-off promotions used to clear end-of-season stock and reactivate lapsed customers.
Distribution is almost entirely direct-to-consumer via the website, which is typical for brands at this positioning - it protects margin and brand presentation simultaneously. Customer acquisition likely leans on organic search, editorial coverage in lifestyle press, and email retention rather than paid social. Repeat purchase rates in the natural-fibre premium category are generally decent once a customer has validated quality; sheepskin slippers in particular tend to generate repurchase cycles. Voucher-code sites represent a meaningful discovery channel for first-time buyers, which is why the volume of active offers - 44 currently listed on CodeHut - is worth paying attention to.
About Celtic & Co.
Celtic & Co. occupies a particular corner of the British clothing market - the one where natural fibres, earthy palettes, and a certain unhurried sensibility meet. Based in Cornwall, the brand sells womenswear, menswear, footwear, and accessories built around sheepskin, wool, cashmere, and leather. It is not fast fashion. The price points make that clear within about three seconds of landing on the homepage.
In practice, shopping here means browsing a curated, relatively compact range. You won't find hundreds of SKUs per category - that's partly the point. The edit is intentional: sheepskin boots and slippers, chunky knitwear, linen dresses, leather bags. Quality is the central argument. Whether the products live up to it is something customers have to judge for themselves, but the materials and construction are at least positioned at a level where the claim is plausible, not laughable.
The website is clean and easy enough to use. Filters work. Product pages carry enough detail to make a reasonably informed purchase. Returns are accepted within a standard window, though as with most premium independent retailers, you'll want to read the current policy before assuming free returns - it has varied over time.
What's good: The natural-fibre focus is genuine rather than decorative. Sheepskin footwear in particular - slippers, ankle boots, moccasins - is where the brand has a legitimate reputation. For anyone wanting to spend money once rather than repeatedly, that's a meaningful consideration.
What's not great: The prices are high, full stop. A pair of sheepskin slippers or a cashmere jumper will test most budgets, and the range is narrow enough that if you don't connect with the aesthetic, there's no safety net of cheaper alternatives tucked away. Delivery costs can also add meaningfully to smaller orders - worth factoring in before you commit.
The closest competitors are Lakeland Leather, Seasalt Cornwall, and at the premium end, brands like Chalk. Celtic & Co. sits above Seasalt on price and arguably on material quality, but below the upper reaches of the heritage luxury market. It's a comfortable middle ground for people who want something considered and durable without quite going full country-house catalogue.
There's no formal loyalty programme to speak of - no points, no tiers. The newsletter occasionally carries exclusive discounts, which is reason enough to sign up if you're a repeat customer. With 12 active voucher codes and 32 deals currently listed on CodeHut, discounts ranging from 10% to 70% off, and 11 codes expiring within the next week, timing matters more than it might seem.
Honest verdict: Celtic & Co. is for people who have decided they want a specific thing - sheepskin boots, a proper wool coat, a linen dress that will last - and are prepared to pay for it. If you're browsing without a clear intent, the prices will feel punishing. If you arrive knowing what you want and arrive with a working discount code, it becomes considerably more reasonable.
How to use a Celtic & Co. discount code
- Browse and add items to your basket as normal. Bear in mind that some codes are category-specific - a knitwear code won't apply to footwear, so check the terms before you get too far into checkout.
- Click the basket icon in the top-right corner to review your order. Don't skip this step - it's where you'll confirm which items qualify before entering any code.
- Look for the discount code or promo code field on the basket or checkout page. It doesn't always auto-appear; on some devices you may need to expand a small "Got a code?" link or similar.
- Type or paste your code exactly as shown - no extra spaces, and mind the capitalisation. Celtic & Co. codes are typically case-sensitive.
- Hit Apply (it won't deduct automatically on its own). The discount should appear as a line item in your order summary immediately. If it doesn't, the code may have expired or not apply to the items in your basket.
- Complete payment as normal. Keep your order confirmation email - it's your proof of the discount applied, useful if anything needs resolving later.
Celtic & Co. shopping tips
- Act on expiring codes promptly. With 11 codes due to expire within the next week, there's a real cost to procrastinating. Check the expiry dates shown on CodeHut before banking on a particular code still working by the weekend.
- The clearance section is where the maths gets interesting. Celtic & Co. runs a Final Clearance category where discounts can reach 70% off - the widest end of the range currently listed. Pairing a clearance item with a further percentage-off code isn't always possible (codes often exclude sale items), but check the terms, because occasionally it is.
- Category-specific codes can be more generous than blanket ones. A 25% off knitwear code may beat a 15% off sitewide code if knitwear is what you're after. Run the numbers both ways before deciding which to use.
- Sign up for the newsletter before your first order. Celtic & Co. has been known to send a welcome discount to new subscribers. If you're planning a first purchase anyway, it costs nothing to check your inbox before hitting "buy".
- Free delivery thresholds are worth engineering your order around. Like most independent retailers, Celtic & Co. offers free delivery above a spend threshold. If you're close to that threshold, adding a lower-cost accessory (a pair of socks, a small leather item) can save more than the item costs.
- Natural fibres have a specific care overhead - factor it in. Sheepskin and cashmere require more careful laundering than standard machine-washable garments. This isn't a reason not to buy, but it's worth knowing before you commit to six cashmere pieces and realise you need specialist cleaning.
- Seasonal timing genuinely affects the range. Celtic & Co.'s knitwear and sheepskin categories thin out in spring and early summer. If you want the widest selection, autumn and early winter are when stock is fullest - though prices are also at their least promotional then.
- Check whether your code applies to full-price items only. Several of the current offers specifically target full-priced spends. Mixing full-price and sale items in one basket can occasionally cause the code to fail or apply only partially - worth separating into two orders if needed.
Celtic & Co. promotions FAQs
Saving at Celtic & Co.
The best Celtic & Co. discounts typically offer between 15% and 50% 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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