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Expired IKEA Codes
These have passed their expiry date but may still work at checkout.
Expired
Likely expired on: 8th Nov 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 8th Nov 2025
Expired
Likely expired on: 20th June
About IKEA
IKEA sells furniture, home accessories, kitchen appliances, lighting, textiles, and a surprising amount of meatballs - all under the same flat-pack, self-assembly philosophy that has been either charming or infuriating depending on your Saturday afternoon. The Swedish brand operates a significant number of large-format stores across the UK, as well as ikea.com, and the two channels work together reasonably well. You can browse online, reserve in-store, or order for home delivery. Some products are only available in certain formats or locations, so it's worth checking stock before you drive two hours to find the Kallax you wanted is on back-order.
What IKEA does genuinely well is value for money at scale. A functional sofa, a full kitchen, a child's bedroom - it's hard to match the price-to-usability ratio elsewhere. The design language is clean, Scandinavian, and deliberately inoffensive, which is either a virtue or a liability depending on how strongly you feel about your home. The quality varies more than the branding suggests: some ranges are robustly built and last decades, others are resolutely disposable. The PAX wardrobe system, for instance, has earned a near-cult following for its modularity. The same cannot be said for every flat-pack bookcase.
The weaknesses are well-documented. Assembly is the obvious one - IKEA furniture requires time, patience, and at least one firm disagreement with whoever is helping. Customer service has historically been patchy, though the in-store experience has improved. Delivery costs can be significant for large items, and the delivery windows are not always precise. Returns for large furniture are managed differently to smaller items; it's worth reading the policy before ordering a king-size bed online.
Competitors include Dunelm for soft furnishings and accessories, Argos for mid-range furniture and appliances, and Made (in its various incarnations) for design-conscious alternatives. For kitchens specifically, Wren and Wickes compete more directly. IKEA sits at a distinct price point below most of them, which is its clearest competitive advantage.
The IKEA Family loyalty scheme is free to join and genuinely worth having. Members get access to exclusive pricing on a rotating selection of products, discounts at the in-store restaurant, and early access to some sales. There is also IKEA Family pricing on insurance, assembly services, and occasionally on fitted kitchens - a category where the savings can be substantial. The scheme doesn't charge a subscription fee, so there's no real reason not to sign up.
On delivery: IKEA charges for home delivery, and costs scale with order size and location. Smaller items can be collected via parcel delivery services at lower cost; larger furniture typically requires a dedicated delivery slot, which costs more. Click-and-collect from store is free. If you're buying anything bulky, factor the delivery cost in upfront - it can noticeably affect the final price.
Currently there is one active voucher code and 31 deals listed on this page, with discounts ranging from 15% to 90% off. The most common discount is 50%, which appears across the restaurant, sleep essentials, and selected sale lines. Seven codes are due to expire within the next week, so if something catches your eye, don't sit on it.
IKEA is the right choice for anyone furnishing a space on a budget, kitting out a first home, or refreshing a room without wanting to spend serious money. It's less suited to people who value premium materials, bespoke sizing, or an effortless delivery and assembly experience. Go in with realistic expectations and you'll generally leave satisfied - even if you leave with three extra tea lights you didn't need.
How to use a IKEA discount code
- Visit ikea.com and add items to your basket as normal. Make sure any IKEA Family-specific deals show the member price if that's what you're targeting - you'll need to be logged into your Family account for these to apply.
- When you're ready, click the basket icon in the top right corner and proceed to checkout. You'll be asked to sign in or continue as a guest.
- On the order summary page, look for a field labelled "Discount code" or "Promo code" - it's typically below the itemised product list. It doesn't always auto-apply, so make sure you click the "Apply" button after entering the code.
- Check that the discount has been deducted before entering any payment details. If the total hasn't changed, the code may not have applied - recheck the terms, as some codes are category-specific or require a minimum spend.
- Complete payment as normal. If a code fails at checkout, double-check it hasn't expired - seven codes on this page are due to expire within days.
IKEA shopping tips
- Join IKEA Family before you buy anything. Membership is free and gives you access to member-only pricing on selected products, which can meaningfully reduce the cost of larger purchases. A fitted kitchen, in particular, is one area where Family pricing makes a real difference.
- Check the As-Is section in-store. IKEA's As-Is area sells ex-display, returned, and slightly damaged items at significant reductions. You won't find it online - it's physical only - but if you're near a store, it's worth a look before buying at full price.
- Time your visit around the Wednesday restaurant deal. IKEA's in-store restaurant offers 50% off selected meals on Wednesdays for Family members. It won't change your life, but it makes the obligatory meatball stop considerably cheaper.
- Don't overlook the clearance and sale sections. Discounts currently listed on this page go up to 90% off on clearance items. These lines change frequently and stock is limited, so it pays to check regularly rather than waiting for a specific event.
- Factor in delivery costs for large orders. For big furniture hauls, home delivery fees can add meaningfully to the total. If you have access to a large enough vehicle - or a friend with a van - click-and-collect from store is free and sidesteps the delivery slot rigmarole entirely.
- IKEA's sale stock doesn't last. With seven codes expiring within the next week and 50% off deals across sleep and selected ranges, the current window is genuinely active. Sale stock, especially on discontinued lines, typically doesn't get replenished once it goes.
- Use the IKEA planning tools for kitchens and wardrobes. The online kitchen and PAX planners are more useful than most retailer configurators. Spending time with them before visiting the store tends to result in a more accurate order and fewer costly changes mid-installation.
- Assembly services exist and are sometimes worth it. IKEA offers a TaskRabbit-based assembly service at additional cost. If you've ever lost an afternoon to a wardrobe and a bag of assorted screws, the premium might be worth calculating before you dismiss it.
IKEA promotions FAQs
Saving at IKEA
The best IKEA discounts typically offer between 5% and 60% 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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