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Expired FFS Beauty Codes
These have passed their expiry date but may still work at checkout.
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Likely expired on: 26th March
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Likely expired on: 18th March
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Likely expired on: 18th March
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 25th Sep 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 20th June
FFS Beauty market overview
FFS Beauty operates in the women's shaving and personal care segment, a corner of UK health and beauty that has seen meaningful disruption from direct-to-consumer subscription brands over the past decade. The market remains dominated in volume terms by established players - Gillette Venus, Wilkinson Sword - but mid-market DTC brands like FFS and Estrid have carved out a loyal base by positioning on both price transparency and the subscription convenience angle. Average order values in the razor subscription category typically sit in the £15-£40 range depending on handle inclusion, with refill-only orders at the lower end.
Repeat purchase behaviour is structurally strong here: razor refills are consumable, which means retention economics are more favourable than in discretionary beauty categories. The challenge for brands like FFS is expanding basket size beyond the core shaving proposition - hence the broader beauty range - without diluting the brand clarity that attracted subscribers in the first place. Promotional cadence tends to be moderate: expect meaningful discounts at launch of new product lines, around major retail events (Black Friday, Valentine's Day given the gifting angle), and periodically via email to lapsed subscribers.
Channel mix leans heavily on direct web traffic and email, with social acquisition playing a supporting role. Voucher-code sites represent a meaningful acquisition channel for DTC brands in this segment, since the subscription model means the cost of a first-order discount is partially offset by expected lifetime value. The competitive set is not vast - this is a fairly concentrated niche - which means FFS doesn't face the same promotional arms race as, say, a mass-market skincare brand. Pricing is mid-market by design.
About FFS Beauty
FFS Beauty - the name stands for "Friction Free Shaving" - is a UK brand built around the idea that women's razors shouldn't cost a small fortune or require a supermarket trolley dash. The core proposition is a subscription razor service: you pick a handle, choose your blade refill plan, and cartridges arrive on a schedule you control. Beyond razors, the site has expanded into a broader beauty range covering skincare, hair removal, and grooming accessories, so it's no longer purely a shaving brand even if that's still the heart of it.
In practice, shopping here is straightforward. The subscription model is the main draw - you set your delivery frequency, pause or cancel when you need to, and the cost per refill tends to undercut what you'd pay for comparable cartridges on the high street. One-off purchases are available too, so you're not forced into a recurring plan if you'd rather just buy a kit outright.
What's genuinely good: the razors themselves are well regarded, the subscription mechanics are less annoying than some (cancellation doesn't require a phone call, which, in 2024, remains a low bar that not every subscription brand clears). The kit bundles offer real value as entry points.
What's less impressive: the broader beauty range is competent rather than compelling. If you're here purely for serums and cleansers, there are more specialist options. The site can also feel slightly cluttered, which isn't a dealbreaker but doesn't help.
The main competition is Estrid, Billie (less present in the UK), and the incumbent Gillette Venus - plus, at the premium end, Art of Shaving adjacent brands. FFS sits comfortably in the mid-market: better than disposable-razor territory, cheaper than luxury. For anyone who buys razor refills with any regularity, the subscription maths usually work in their favour.
Delivery: free standard delivery is available above a threshold, with paid options for faster shipping. Subscription orders tend to qualify for free delivery as standard, which is part of the point. Check the current terms on-site, as thresholds do shift.
Honest verdict: If you use a cartridge razor regularly and find yourself wincing at refill prices, FFS is worth a proper look. If you're an occasional shaver or already happy with a safety razor, you'll probably find it surplus to requirements.
How to use a FFS Beauty discount code
- Browse to ffs.co.uk and add your chosen products or subscription kit to your basket.
- Click the basket icon and proceed to checkout. You'll need to be signed in or create an account - FFS requires this before you can apply a code.
- On the order summary page, look for a field labelled "Discount code" or "Promo code" - it's usually below the product list, not always immediately obvious on mobile.
- Type or paste your code exactly as it appears. Capitalisation can matter, so copy-paste where possible rather than retyping.
- Hit "Apply" - it won't apply automatically. Watch for a confirmation message and check the order total updates before continuing.
- If the code is rejected, check whether it applies to subscriptions or one-off purchases specifically - some codes are restricted to one or the other. Also verify it hasn't expired; two codes on this page are due to expire within the next week.
FFS Beauty shopping tips
- Check expiry dates before you get attached to a code. Of the 10 active voucher codes currently listed, two are expiring within the next week. Don't discover this at checkout.
- The discount range is genuinely wide. Discounts on this page run from 5% all the way up to 88% off - the top end tends to apply to specific clearance items or bundled kits rather than site-wide. Hunt for the higher-value offers rather than defaulting to the first code you see.
- Kit bundles are usually the best entry point. The £17-£18 off selected kit offers represent solid savings if you're buying a handle and refills together. Buying them separately rarely works out cheaper.
- Subscription vs one-off pricing matters. The per-refill cost on a subscription is lower, but factor in how often you actually shave. If you'd pause or cancel within a month anyway, a one-off purchase with a discount code may cost less overall.
- The most common discount is 10% off, which is fine but not exceptional. If you're not in a hurry, hold out for one of the higher-value kit codes - there are 26 active deals on this page alongside the 10 voucher codes.
- Free P&P on the Lazyfella Shave Set is worth noting if that's on your list. Delivery costs can quietly inflate a small order, so a free-shipping code on a specific product is genuinely useful rather than cosmetic.
- Subscription pausing is your friend. If you've stocked up during a promotion, pause your subscription rather than cancelling - you keep any subscriber pricing and don't have to go through sign-up again when you run out.
- Seasonal sales do happen. Black Friday and January tend to bring the sharpest discounts in the health and beauty category broadly. If you can time a new subscription start or a kit purchase around those windows, it's worth waiting.
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The best FFS Beauty discounts typically offer between 5% and 80% 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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