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All High Street TV codes
High Street TV savings snapshot
Expired High Street TV Codes
These have passed their expiry date but may still work at checkout.
Expired
Likely expired on: 26th June
Expired
Likely expired on: 2nd April
Expired
Likely expired on: 20th June
Expired
Likely expired on: 20th June
Expired
Likely expired on: 20th June
Expired
Likely expired on: 20th June
Expired
Likely expired on: 28th March
Expired
Likely expired on: 21st February
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Likely expired on: 15th February
Expired
Likely expired on: 10th January
Expired
Likely expired on: 8th January
Expired
Likely expired on: 29th Dec 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 20th June
Expired
Likely expired on: 26th June
Expired
Likely expired on: 2nd Oct 2025
About High Street TV
High Street TV sits in an interesting corner of British retail: part direct-response TV shopping channel, part online catalogue for the kind of products you'd once have seen demonstrated at 2am on satellite. Despite the name appearing under the clothing and footwear umbrella here, the reality is broader - fitness equipment, wellness gadgets, kitchen tools, garden gear, and yes, occasionally apparel-adjacent products like compression wear or heated insoles. If you've ever watched a channel demo a NutriBullet rival or a self-wringing mop with genuine enthusiasm, you understand the aesthetic.
In practice, ordering from highstreettv.com is fairly straightforward: browse by category, add to basket, check out. The range is curated rather than vast - this isn't Amazon. You're getting a focused selection of direct-to-consumer and TV-promoted products, often sold at a slight premium compared with supermarket equivalents, though the quality tends to justify it. The site has improved considerably over the years and now feels like a functional mid-range UK e-commerce store rather than a digital extension of a shopping channel.
What's genuinely good here? The product demonstrations and videos on listings are better than most UK retailers manage. You get a real sense of how something works before you buy, which matters enormously for fitness equipment or kitchen gadgets where "looks good on the box" is famously optimistic. The discount range is also worth paying attention to: currently 21 active voucher codes and 55 live deals are listed here on CodeHut, with savings stretching from 10% up to 84% off on selected lines. That upper end is rare and worth chasing when it appears.
The weaknesses are real, though. Product breadth is limited - if you're after something specific and it's not in their catalogue, you're better off elsewhere immediately. Pricing without a code can feel inflated relative to the broader market; High Street TV's model leans on perceived value and demonstration, which doesn't always translate to the lowest base price. Returns processes for larger items can also be cumbersome, as they are across most direct TV retail operations - read the returns policy before you buy anything bulky.
The main competition is a mixed bag: QVC and its online store occupy similar territory, as does Ideal World. For specific product categories, you'll find Amazon undercutting on price while offering less context, and specialist retailers offering more depth. High Street TV's edge is curation and clarity - you know exactly what something is supposed to do, and the site tells you how well it does it.
On loyalty and membership: there's no formal subscription tier in the way that, say, Amazon Prime operates. Signing up to the mailing list does yield new customer discount codes and periodic promotional emails, so it's not entirely pointless - just don't expect a structured rewards programme.
Delivery is worth examining carefully. Free delivery thresholds apply on certain offers, and the current voucher listings include free next-day delivery on fitness and wellness items. Standard delivery is otherwise charged, so factor that into price comparisons. Next-day options exist but aren't unconditional - check the cut-off time if timing matters.
The honest verdict: High Street TV works well for buyers who want an explained, curated purchase rather than the cheapest possible widget. If you're the type who watches a product demo before committing, this is your shop. If you're purely price-hunting or need deep range, you'll find the boundaries quickly. Come with a voucher code - the 10% off offers are the most common and the most reliably stackable against already-discounted lines - and the value proposition improves considerably.
How to use a High Street TV discount code
- Head to highstreettv.com and find your item. Add it to your basket as normal - don't expect codes to apply before you've done that.
- Click through to your basket and look for the promo code or discount code field. It's typically displayed below the order summary, not always immediately visible. Scroll down if you can't see it.
- Type or paste your code exactly as listed - case matters on some codes, so copy-paste rather than retyping is the safer habit.
- Hit the Apply button. The discount won't activate until you do this; it doesn't trigger automatically on entry.
- Check that the total has updated correctly before proceeding. If the code hasn't applied, the site usually shows an error message - check whether the code has expired or whether your basket contents qualify (some codes are category-specific).
- Complete checkout as normal. If a code genuinely won't apply and you're confident it should be valid, try a different browser or clear your cookies - occasional session issues do cause this.
High Street TV shopping tips
- Act on expiring codes sooner rather than later. Currently, 3 codes on this page are expiring within the next week. High Street TV's promotional codes tend to be time-limited, and once they're gone, the next batch isn't guaranteed to offer the same percentage or the same categories.
- The 10% off codes are the workhorse discount. It's the most common offer available here, and it applies broadly. When a deeper discount isn't available for your category, a reliable 10% off all orders is worth using rather than waiting for something better that may not materialise.
- Fitness and wellness lines attract the sharpest deals. This category regularly attracts both higher percentage discounts and free delivery bundles simultaneously - a meaningful combined saving on items that are often priced above £30 anyway.
- Check the category specifics before applying a code. Several current offers are restricted to garden, fans, cooking, or fitness lines. Applying a garden code to a kitchen gadget won't work, and the error message won't always make this obvious immediately.
- The discount ceiling here is unusually high. With deals reaching up to 84% off on selected items, it's worth browsing the sale section even if you arrived with a specific product in mind. That kind of markdown is typically clearance stock, so size and colour options may be limited - but the saving is real.
- New customer codes are legitimately useful. If you haven't ordered before, the first-order discount codes are among the more consistent offers available and worth using on a higher-value item rather than a low-cost impulse buy.
- Free delivery thresholds vary by promotion. Some free delivery offers are unconditional within a code; others require you to hit a minimum spend. Calculate the total honestly - paying for delivery on a low-cost item can erode a percentage discount quickly.
- Product videos are part of the value, not just marketing. Before dismissing something as overpriced compared to Amazon, watch the demonstration. High Street TV's product content is better than average, and understanding what you're actually buying reduces the likelihood of a return - which, for larger items, is genuinely inconvenient.
High Street TV promotions FAQs
Saving at High Street TV
The best High Street TV discounts typically offer between 10% and 83% 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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