£3 off First Orders
Ends: 1+ month Used: 1 time
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Food delivery apps are no longer novel. They’ve nestled into our lives somewhere between streaming backlogs and unread emails - a comforting indulgence that requires little more than a thumb press. In the midst of this now-crowded landscape, Foodhub offers a subtly different pitch: over 30,000 takeaways and restaurants across…Food delivery apps are no longer novel. They’ve nestled into our lives somewhere between streaming backlogs and unread emails -…
Ends: 1+ month Used: 1 time
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 1+ month Used: 3 times
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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Food delivery apps are no longer novel. They’ve nestled into our lives somewhere between streaming backlogs and unread emails - a comforting indulgence that requires little more than a thumb press. In the midst of this now-crowded landscape, Foodhub offers a subtly different pitch: over 30,000 takeaways and restaurants across the UK, with the promise of no commission fees for restaurants, and discounts that actually show up on your receipt. It’s not out to "reinvent" food delivery so much as to quietly reframe it: same food, similar interface, slightly lower price tags. Dream big, or just reasonably.
Unlike competitors that skim a cut from restaurant partners, Foodhub reportedly charges no commission. In theory, that means lower costs for restaurateurs and, potentially, better pricing for customers. In practice, those savings don’t always translate into significant differences you’d notice at checkout. Still, it’s a differentiator - one Foodhub leans on to justify its recurring promotions and its mild sense of being "outside" the main food delivery ecosystem (if only barely).
Unburdened by big-name branding excess, the platform keeps its aesthetics and user interface refreshingly bland. Search, filter, check reviews, order - every action feels familiar to anyone who’s used Deliveroo, Uber Eats, Just Eat, or frankly any app this decade. The experience is serviceable, if unremarkable. Which, perhaps, is the point.
Foodhub skews towards the frugal. Regular discounts - up to 30% off at select outlets - and rotating promo codes populate the platform. The most notable carrots dangled include £3 off a first order over £9 with the code TRYFH, or £5 off anything above £20 using FH5. If you’re lucky (or just new), these may apply automatically. If you’re not, you’ll get a polite shrug from the app instead. As with most coupon-driven strategies, your mileage will vary, and no expiry dates are clearly listed - perhaps to preserve the illusion of spontaneity. Try a code, cross your fingers, order noodles anyway.
While Foodhub highlights support for "local takeaways," it doesn’t conjure moments of neighbourly bonding so much as offer a map peppered with the usual suspects. If your idea of hyperlocal cuisine is four curry houses, two kebab shops, and a Chinese takeaway operating from the same three postcodes - great news. The breadth of choice is wide, though not necessarily deep. But for most purposes - late-night cravings, lazy Fridays, ill-advised weekday biryanis - it delivers.
The app’s suggestion that this is a momentous "culinary quest" lands with all the impact of a lukewarm spring roll. Still, there’s something quietly comforting about knowing what you’ll get and roughly when it’ll arrive. Like a friend who’s always 20 minutes late, but at least always shows up.
Foodhub isn’t trying to be everything to everyone, which is refreshingly honest. It doesn’t offer groceries, lightning-fast delivery, or a TikTok-ready interface. It offers takeaway, discounts, and the dependable kind of service that rarely sparks passionate loyalty but also seldom leads to table-flipping frustration. It’s straightforward enough for your gran to use, but efficient enough for your post-Zoom-dazed brain to handle as well.
Yes, it looks a bit ordinary. Yes, the promotional language overreaches like every other food app's marketing deck. But it works. And if you’re going to eat your feelings on a Wednesday night, there are worse ways to spend £12. Especially if someone knocks £3 off.
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⭐ Rating: 4 / 5 (34 votes)