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Likely expired on: 24th Jul 2025
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Likely expired on: 7th Aug 2025
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Likely expired on: 19th Oct 2025
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Likely expired on: 1st Nov 2025
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Likely expired on: 28th Sep 2025
eDreams market overview
The UK online travel agency market is competitive and fairly consolidated at the top, with Expedia Group, Booking Holdings, and a handful of European players - including eDreams' parent, eDreams ODIGEO - competing for the same transactional traveller. eDreams occupies a mid-to-upper tier position, with stronger brand recognition in continental Europe than in the UK, where Lastminute.com and On the Beach have historically had more consumer mindshare for package travel, and Skyscanner functions as a powerful upstream comparison layer that channels traffic to multiple OTAs simultaneously.
Average order values in the OTA category vary enormously by product type - a domestic flight might be £80, a European package holiday several hundred - but the margin structure is thin. OTAs typically earn a percentage commission from suppliers plus ancillary revenue from add-ons like insurance, seat upgrades, and car hire. The Prime subscription model is eDreams ODIGEO's most distinctive strategic move: converting one-off bookers into recurring subscribers changes the unit economics meaningfully, reducing reliance on expensive paid acquisition for each transaction.
Promotional cadence in the flights and travel category tends to cluster around key booking windows - January (post-Christmas holiday planning), spring half-term, and the pre-summer rush from March to May. Black Friday has grown as a travel deals moment, though the discounts are often on future travel rather than imminent departures. With 50 live codes and discounts ranging up to 72%, eDreams is clearly running an active promotional programme, which is consistent with OTAs' general approach of using voucher-code channels as a relatively low-cost customer acquisition tool.
About eDreams
eDreams is one of Europe's larger online travel agencies, operating across dozens of markets and selling flights, hotels, car hire, and holiday packages through a single platform. In practice, it works like most OTAs: you search, it aggregates options from airlines and accommodation providers, and you book through eDreams rather than directly with the carrier. That middleman position is both the point and the problem.
The platform's strength is range. It pulls in fares from hundreds of airlines - including low-cost carriers that don't always surface on Google Flights - and lets you combine flights, hotels, and car hire in one checkout. For anyone who finds Skyscanner useful but wants to actually complete the booking in the same place, eDreams does that job reasonably well.
The weakness is equally well-documented: customer service can be slow and frustrating, particularly for cancellations or changes, where you're sometimes dealing with both the airline's policies and eDreams' own fees. This isn't unique to eDreams - it's an OTA-wide issue - but it's worth being clear-eyed about before booking something with any flexibility risk attached.
The most interesting thing about eDreams commercially is its Prime subscription. For a monthly or annual fee, Prime members get access to discounted fares that aren't visible to regular visitors, plus a credits system on bookings. The sample offers on this page - including significant reductions for Prime members - suggest the scheme can deliver real value if you're booking more than a couple of trips a year. If you're booking once, the maths probably don't work in your favour.
eDreams competes most directly with Lastminute.com, On the Beach, Expedia, and Booking.com. Against Expedia it holds its own on flights; for hotels, Booking.com's inventory depth is hard to beat. Where eDreams tends to show well is on certain international routes where its aggregation pulls in fares that other platforms miss.
There's no physical retail presence and no phone booking - this is an entirely digital product. That's fine until something goes wrong, at which point the support infrastructure (online chat, email) gets tested. Results vary considerably.
Currently there are 50 live deals on this page, with discounts ranging from 23% to 72% off. The 40% mark is where most of them cluster. One code is due to expire within the next week, so if something looks relevant, don't sit on it.
Who should use eDreams: frequent travellers who'll get value from the Prime subscription, or anyone searching for international flight combinations that mainstream comparison tools miss. Who should probably look elsewhere: anyone who anticipates needing to change or cancel, or who wants a proper customer service conversation when things go sideways.
How to use a eDreams discount code
- Head to edreams.co.uk and search for your flight, hotel, or package as normal. Don't apply the code yet - build your booking first.
- Once you've selected your option and worked through the seat, baggage, and extras screens, you'll reach the payment summary page. This is where the promo code field appears - it's not always visible until you're deep into checkout, which catches people out.
- Look for a field labelled something like "Promo code" or "Discount code" near the order summary. Type your code exactly as shown - eDreams codes are case-sensitive, so copy-paste is safer than typing manually.
- Hit "Apply" (it doesn't auto-apply). The discount should update the total immediately. If the price doesn't change, the code hasn't worked - don't proceed assuming it'll adjust later.
- Complete your payment details and confirm the booking. You should receive a confirmation email with the discounted price reflected. If the email shows full price, contact support before assuming everything is fine.
eDreams shopping tips
- Check whether Prime is worth it before your next booking. The Prime membership unlocks a separate tier of fares, and several of the current deals on this page are Prime-specific. If you're booking two or more trips in a year, run the numbers - the subscription can pay for itself on a single return long-haul flight.
- One code is expiring this week. With 50 deals currently live and at least one on the way out, it's worth filtering by expiry date before spending time on a code that's already gone. Expired codes often remain in circulation on other sites long after they stop working.
- The 40% discount is the most common offer available right now. Deals at the extremes - the 72% end - tend to be Prime-specific or attached to very particular routes and dates. If you can't access those, 40% is a realistic benchmark for what you might actually redeem.
- Flexible date searches save more than discount codes on some routes. eDreams has a flexible date view; shifting travel by even one day on busy routes can drop the fare by more than any available code. Use both levers together for the best result.
- Add travel insurance carefully. eDreams will offer its own insurance at checkout. It's worth comparing against standalone policies - sometimes it's fine, sometimes you can do better elsewhere for the same cover.
- Screenshot everything at checkout. This applies across OTAs, but especially here: capture the promo code being applied, the final price, and the booking reference. If there's a discrepancy later, you'll need the evidence.
- For hotels specifically, compare with Booking.com before committing. eDreams' hotel inventory is decent, but Booking.com's price-match guarantee and loyalty programme (Genius) can tip the balance on popular properties. Worth a 60-second cross-check.
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The best eDreams discounts typically offer between 10% and 40% 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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