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Expired Outdoor Look Codes
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Likely expired on: 2nd Jul 2025
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Likely expired on: 20th May
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Likely expired on: 1st Jul 2025
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Likely expired on: 18th Nov 2025
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Likely expired on: 2nd Jul 2025
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Likely expired on: 2nd Jul 2025
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Likely expired on: 20th June
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Outdoor Look market overview
The UK outdoor clothing and equipment market is moderately consolidated at the top - dominated by a handful of large chains and a cluster of mid-size online specialists. Outdoor Look sits in the latter group: a digital-first retailer competing primarily on price and discount depth rather than premium experience or exclusive product. Its direct competitors in the value-online segment include Blacks, Mountain Warehouse, and the online arms of Go Outdoors. Against these, Outdoor Look differentiates mainly through promotional aggressiveness - discount ranges reaching 80% off put it at the sharper end of the market on headline numbers, though stock availability at peak discounts can be limited.
Average order values in the outdoor clothing category typically sit in the £60-£120 range for online purchases, with jackets and waterproofs - the category's highest-value items - pulling the average up. The promotional cadence in this segment is relentless: end-of-season clearance, Black Friday, post-Christmas sales, and summer clearance events mean there are rarely more than a few weeks of full-price trading across the calendar year. Outdoor Look's model aligns with this reality; it leans into promotional pricing as the default rather than the exception.
Customer acquisition in this segment skews heavily toward paid search and voucher-code aggregators - shoppers arriving with a discount code in hand rather than brand loyalty driving repeat visits. Repeat purchase behaviour tends to be moderate in outdoor clothing; buyers return for seasonal updates or when kit wears out, but it's not the frequency you'd see in fashion or consumables. This makes first-visit conversion crucial, which explains why the discount structure is so front-and-centre in the brand's approach.
About Outdoor Look
Outdoor Look is a UK-based online retailer specialising in outdoor clothing and equipment - coats, jackets, fleeces, walking boots, and the general kit that keeps you functional when British weather does its worst. The range leans heavily into well-known outdoor and sports brands rather than own-label product, so you're shopping the labels you already know, just through a different door.
In practice, using the site is straightforward. You browse by category or brand, add to basket, and check out in the usual way. Nothing unusual there. The real reason people end up here is price: Outdoor Look runs a fairly aggressive sale operation, with discounts that regularly reach 70% off on clearance lines. Of the 24 offers currently listed on this page, the most common discount sits at 70% off - and the range across active deals stretches from 10% up to 80%. That's not typical for a premium outdoor retailer, and it tells you something about the pricing strategy. This is a volume-discount destination, not a full-price flagship.
What's genuinely good here is the breadth of the sale. Coats and jackets are the headline act, but there's meaningful coverage of men's and women's footwear, gym and training kit, and general outdoor gear. If you need a technical waterproof and you're not fussed about buying last season's colourway, you can do very well. Three active voucher codes and 21 live deals at time of writing means there's usually something worth stacking against a sale price.
What's less good: the experience of shopping a heavily discounted multi-brand site means stock availability can be patchy, and sizing gaps are common in clearance. If you need a specific size in a specific item, it may not be there. That's not a criticism unique to Outdoor Look - it's the nature of the discount model - but it's worth going in with realistic expectations.
The main competition comes from the likes of Blacks, Go Outdoors, and Mountain Warehouse at the value end, and Cotswold Outdoor or Snow+Rock if you want more curated, full-price stock. Against Go Outdoors in particular, Outdoor Look holds its own on headline discount depth, though Go Outdoors has the advantage of physical stores for returns and fit. Online-only means Outdoor Look's return process is purely postal.
There's no loyalty programme or subscription tier that meaningfully changes the maths. The newsletter is the main channel for early access to sales and occasional codes - worth signing up if this is a regular destination for you. Delivery is where you'll want to pay attention: free delivery thresholds apply, so check the current terms before assuming a small order ships free. Orders below the threshold attract a charge that can blunt a modest discount, particularly on single lower-value items.
Honest verdict: Outdoor Look suits buyers who are flexible on exact product - happy to take what's in stock at a strong discount rather than hunting down one specific item. If you need a decent waterproof jacket and you're not precious about brand or season, you'll likely find something here for considerably less than RRP. If you need an exact size and colour in a current product, a dedicated outdoor retailer is the safer bet.
How to use a Outdoor Look discount code
- Start on the CodeHut page and copy the code you want - some codes apply automatically via a tracked link, but most require manual entry, so keep it copied.
- Head to outdoorlook.co.uk and add the items you want to your basket. A few codes are category-specific (sale items only, or a particular department), so make sure your basket contents actually qualify before expecting the discount to land.
- Proceed to checkout. The promo code field appears on the basket or the first checkout screen - look for a box labelled something like "discount code" or "promo code". It's usually visible without needing to expand anything, but on mobile it can sit below the order summary, so scroll down if you can't spot it.
- Paste your code into the box and hit the apply button. Don't skip this step - the discount won't register until you actively apply it. The page should update with the revised total immediately.
- If the code doesn't apply, double-check that your basket meets any minimum spend requirement and that none of the items are excluded. Sale items occasionally sit outside standard code eligibility.
- Once the discount is confirmed in the order summary, continue to payment. The reduced total is what you'll be charged.
Outdoor Look shopping tips
- Start in the sale section, not the homepage. With 70% off being the most common discount level across current deals, the clearance and sale departments are where the real value is. Going straight to full-price listings and then applying a 10% code will almost always yield a worse outcome than finding the same brand in the sale.
- Check multiple category sales simultaneously. The discounts aren't uniform across departments - footwear, gym kit, and outerwear can be on different promotional schedules. If you're buying for a trip, compare across categories rather than assuming the same deal applies everywhere.
- Factor delivery costs into smaller orders. A 10% discount on a £25 item stops looking attractive if postage erases most of the saving. Either build your basket to meet the free delivery threshold or make sure the net saving still makes sense after shipping.
- Sign up to the newsletter before a big purchase. Outdoor Look's email list tends to be the first place sale codes and early-access offers appear. If you're planning a larger spend - full walking kit, for example - it's worth waiting a few days after subscribing to see what lands in your inbox.
- Sizing runs out fast on clearance lines. Popular sizes (particularly mid-range men's and women's) disappear quickly once an item hits a deep discount. If you see your size at a good price, don't leave it in a wishlist expecting it to still be there tomorrow.
- Use the 21 live deals as a starting point. With 21 deals currently active alongside 3 voucher codes, the deals listings alone - without any code - are often enough to get a strong price. The codes tend to work best on top of already-discounted stock, so combining both where possible is the most effective approach.
- Cross-reference with competitor pricing on premium brands. For big-name outdoor brands, it's always worth a quick check against the brand's own site or a competitor. Outdoor Look's sale prices are competitive, but end-of-season sales at dedicated outdoor retailers occasionally match or beat them on specific products.
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The best Outdoor Look discounts typically offer between 10% and 15% 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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