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Expired Crocus Codes
These have passed their expiry date but may still work at checkout.
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 5th May
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Likely expired on: 16th June
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 27th March
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 7th April
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 2nd January
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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: 21st February
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 5th May
Crocus market overview
The UK online gardening market has consolidated around a handful of specialist retailers, with Crocus sitting firmly in the quality-conscious mid-to-premium segment. Its main direct competitors - Sarah Raven, Thompson & Morgan, RHS online - collectively serve a relatively affluent, repeat-purchase customer base. Unlike general garden centres, pure-play online plant retailers live and die by seasonal demand spikes: spring (March-May) drives a disproportionate share of annual revenue across the category, with a secondary autumn bulb peak in September-October. Average order values in this segment typically run higher than mass-market gardening retailers, reflecting both product quality and the nature of the buyer.
Pricing architecture at Crocus follows a pattern common to specialist plant retailers: list prices are held relatively firm, with promotional activity concentrated in category-specific events (rose sales, bulb promotions) and seasonal clearances rather than blanket sitewide discounts. The 10%-60% discount range currently visible on this page is broadly representative of how the brand operates across a year - frequent mid-range offers, occasional deep clearance discounts on end-of-season stock. The prevalence of 50% off as the headline discount figure reflects clearance dynamics rather than sustained margin erosion.
Customer acquisition in this category is heavily influenced by organic search and gardening editorial content - Crocus has invested consistently in its advice and plant guide content, which performs well in search and feeds repeat visits. Social channels, particularly Pinterest and Instagram, drive discovery for visual plant categories. Repeat purchase rates in specialist gardening tend to be high relative to general retail: gardeners who find a reliable source tend to stay loyal, and the seasonal planting calendar naturally creates multiple purchase occasions per year.
About Crocus
Crocus is one of the UK's better-known online garden retailers - the kind of place that quietly became a reference point for serious gardeners without making too much noise about it. The range spans plants, bulbs, seeds, trees, shrubs, garden furniture and tools, plus a reasonably curated selection of houseplants. You browse by season, by plant type, or by their editorial collections, which are genuinely useful if you're not sure what works where.
Buying from Crocus works much as you'd expect from a plant specialist: you order online, they dispatch when the plant is at its best for planting, which means delivery windows can be longer than you might anticipate. That's a feature, not a bug - bare-root roses in November, summer bulbs in spring - but it's worth knowing upfront if you're expecting Amazon-speed turnaround on a clematis.
What Crocus does well is quality and range. The plant descriptions are detailed, the RHS plant finder integration is genuinely helpful, and the photography is accurate rather than aspirational (you tend to get what you see). For less experienced gardeners, the planting guides and advice content are practical rather than patronising. It's not a cheap option - this isn't the place to bulk-buy bedding plants on a budget - but the quality-to-price ratio holds up reasonably well for specimen plants and more unusual varieties you won't find at a garden centre chain.
The honest weakness is delivery cost. Charges apply below certain spend thresholds, and for lower-value plant orders this can feel disproportionate - a £12 perennial suddenly costs considerably more once postage is added. Minimum order values can also apply to specific promotions. That said, with 13 active voucher codes and 58 deals currently live on this page - discounts ranging from 10% to 60% off, with 50% the most commonly featured discount - there's usually a way to soften the outlay.
Crocus competes most directly with Sarah Raven, Thompson & Morgan, and the RHS online shop, plus the more mainstream end covered by Suttons and Dobies. Against Sarah Raven it's broader but slightly less editorial; against Thompson & Morgan it feels more premium and less discount-driven. Garden centres like Hillier or Notcutts serve a similar quality tier but obviously require you to physically show up.
There's no headline loyalty or subscription programme to speak of - no points scheme, no paid membership tier. The newsletter is worth subscribing to: it tends to carry genuine seasonal offers rather than relentless promotional noise, and that's where early-access sale alerts occasionally appear.
Delivery is charged on a sliding scale depending on order value and plant type. Larger orders - particularly those above around £50 - tend to attract free or reduced delivery, and free P&P codes are among the more valuable offers that appear here. Seasonal sales, particularly end-of-season clearances and the pre-spring bulb period, are the best times to find meaningful reductions. One code is expiring within the next week, so if you're sitting on a half-finished basket, now would be the time to check what's still live.
Who should shop here? Anyone who cares about getting decent plants rather than just cheap ones, and anyone looking for more unusual varieties. Who shouldn't? Anyone expecting fast delivery, low delivery charges on small orders, or a bargain-bin experience. Go to a supermarket for that.
How to use a Crocus discount code
- Browse crocus.co.uk and add everything you want to your basket - some codes are order-value dependent, so it helps to have your items in first before you check eligibility.
- Proceed to the checkout by clicking your basket icon, then continue through to the payment stage. The promo code field typically appears on the order summary or payment page, not always at the basket stage - don't panic if you don't see it immediately.
- Find the field labelled something like 'Promotional code' or 'Discount code', type or paste your code carefully. Watch for extra spaces if you're copying from a browser - they'll cause the code to fail.
- Hit 'Apply'. The discount should reflect in your order total immediately. If it doesn't update straight away, don't proceed - check the code is active and that your order meets any minimum spend or category conditions.
- If the code refuses to work, check whether it's restricted to specific plant categories (several current offers are category-specific - roses, hydrangeas, bulbs) and that your basket actually contains qualifying items.
- Complete your order as normal. Delivery options and dates will be confirmed at checkout based on the plants in your basket.
Crocus shopping tips
- Watch the category-specific codes. A significant number of Crocus offers are restricted to particular plant types - roses, hydrangeas, summer bulbs, seedlings. Always check the code conditions before building your basket around it; mixing qualifying and non-qualifying items doesn't usually split the discount.
- Time your bulb orders carefully. Bulb pricing tends to be sharpest just after peak season - spring bulbs in late summer before demand spikes, summer bulbs early in the year. The 50% off deals that appear most frequently on this page tend to cluster around these windows.
- The free P&P codes are worth prioritising. Delivery charges are the most irritating part of ordering plants online, and free postage codes change the economics of smaller orders significantly. With 13 active codes currently live, it's worth checking the P&P offers before anything else if your order is under £50.
- One code is expiring within the next week. If you've been browsing and haven't committed yet, check the expiry dates at the top of this page - there's at least one that won't wait.
- Seasonal clearances are genuinely worth waiting for. Crocus runs end-of-season sales where discounts of 50% or more on plants and garden accessories are common. Spring and autumn transitions are the prime windows. The range thins out but the savings are real.
- Sign up for the email list. Crocus's emails are more editorially driven than most garden retailers - they follow the planting calendar, which means they tend to surface relevant offers at useful moments rather than just blasting promotions year-round.
- RHS members may have access to separate discounts via the RHS partnership - worth checking on the RHS website directly rather than assuming it applies automatically at checkout.
- Bundle orders to hit free delivery thresholds. If you're close to a free P&P minimum, adding a bag of compost, a tool, or a few extra bulbs is often more economical than paying delivery on a smaller order.
Crocus promotions FAQs
Saving at Crocus
The best Crocus discounts typically offer between 10% 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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