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Likely expired on: 5th Dec 2025
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Likely expired on: 21st Sep 2025
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Likely expired on: 4th Oct 2025
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Likely expired on: 5th Oct 2025
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Likely expired on: 25th Apr 2025
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Likely expired on: 25th Apr 2025
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Likely expired on: 25th Apr 2025
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Likely expired on: 25th Apr 2025
The Harvester model
Harvester is a pub-restaurant chain operated by Mitchells & Butlers, the FTSE-listed hospitality group that also runs Toby Carvery, Ember Inns, and Stonehouse Pizza. That parentage matters. Harvester isn't trying to be a neighbourhood independent; it's an engineered mid-market proposition - grills, salads, and unlimited bread rolls - designed to deliver consistent margins across roughly 200 UK sites. The free unlimited salad bar is the brand's single most recognisable feature and its cleverest piece of value theatre: it costs M&B almost nothing per head in food cost, but it creates a perception of abundance that anchors the visit.
On pricing, Harvester sits squarely in the casual dining middle tier. A typical main - rotisserie chicken or a grilled burger - runs £13-£16. A full sit-down meal for two with soft drinks lands at approximately £42, making it competitive with Beefeater and Toby Carvery but slightly above a Wetherspoons meal deal. The Sunday set menu and evening set menus, which current deals bring down meaningfully, push the effective AOV for a two-course dinner for two closer to £30 - that's where the real value sits. Set menus are Harvester's sharpest weapon against the £15-a-head fast-casual competition from the likes of Nando's.
The competitive landscape is crowded and consolidating. Beefeater (also M&B) and Toby Carvery occupy overlapping demographics, which creates an odd internal cannibalisation dynamic within the same parent group. Externally, Harvester competes with Hungry Horse (Greene King), Brewers Fayre (Whitbread), and - at the premium edge - the Ember Inns estate. None of these brands is particularly innovative. Harvester's differentiation is almost entirely execution-based: the salad bar, the grill format, and the consistent suburban retail-park location strategy. That last point is underrated. Being in a retail park next to a Premier Inn isn't glamorous, but it guarantees footfall from families and business travellers with nowhere better to be.
The weakness is menu fatigue. Harvester's core offer has changed remarkably little in a decade, which is either reassuring brand consistency or stagnation, depending on your appetite for innovation. Younger demographics skew away; the core customer is 35-55, family-oriented, and price-sensitive. That cohort is under real household income pressure right now, which is exactly why the discount ecosystem - currently 1 active voucher code and 31 live deals, ranging from 15% to 40% off with 25% the most common figure - matters more than it might for an upmarket brand.
The verdict: Harvester is a competent, unexciting machine for delivering reliable grills at a price that makes sense when you use one of those deals. Without a discount, the value case is merely adequate. With 25-40% off, it's genuinely good value for a family sit-down meal.
Is Harvester worth it?
For families, suburban households, and anyone who views a Sunday roast as a weekly ritual rather than an occasion, yes - especially via the set menus. A two-course Sunday lunch or evening meal with a deal applied represents strong value per head against home cooking once you factor in time and effort. The salad bar inclusion tips it further.
If you're under 30, eating alone, or want anything that feels remotely contemporary, Harvester probably isn't for you. Nando's offers faster service and a more energetic atmosphere for a similar spend. Bills or Côte will cost £10-£15 more per head but deliver noticeably better food and room design.
The honest verdict: use a deal, order the set menu, enjoy the salad bar, and calibrate your expectations accordingly. This isn't destination dining - it's competent, affordable, and entirely functional.
Payment and finance at Harvester
Harvester is a restaurant chain, so the standard BNPL architecture - Klarna, Clearpay, PayPal Credit - doesn't apply in the way it does for e-commerce retailers. You pay at the table or at the bar, typically by card, cash, or contactless. Gift cards are available through the Mitchells & Butlers gift card platform and can be used across the Harvester estate; these make a practical present for the brand's core demographic. The Flavor loyalty programme (M&B's cross-brand scheme) is the closest thing to a finance or rewards benefit: members accumulate points and access member-exclusive discounts, including the 25% off mains that appears regularly across current deals. There is no minimum spend stated for most voucher-based offers, though individual terms vary.
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Saving at Harvester
The best Harvester discounts typically offer between 15% 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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