Extra Get 10% off Orders
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
For something as unimportant as sneakers, people take them awfully seriously. Entire economies - albeit informal ones - have emerged around them. The grey market for limited-edition Air Jordans could probably fund a low-budget space programme. And somewhere between the die-hard collector and the slightly-sweaty gym-goer lies the average shopper,…For something as unimportant as sneakers, people take them awfully seriously. Entire economies - albeit informal ones - have emerged…
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: Tomorrow
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
These may still work, so give them a try if you're still looking for a working promo code.
× Likely expired on: 8th May
× Likely expired on: 30th June
× Likely expired on: 19th June
× Likely expired on: 17th June
For something as unimportant as sneakers, people take them awfully seriously. Entire economies - albeit informal ones - have emerged around them. The grey market for limited-edition Air Jordans could probably fund a low-budget space programme. And somewhere between the die-hard collector and the slightly-sweaty gym-goer lies the average shopper, who just wants a decent pair of trainers at a slightly less-than-extortionate price. Enter Foot Locker, one of retail’s more enduring if oddly named institutions, with its latest push: The Zendaya Edit, a new wave of retro remixes, and some predictably quiet voucher hooks buried under a rainforest of lifestyle marketing.
Foot Locker's loyalty programme, FLX, offers a 10% discount to new sign-ups. It's worth noting that retailers rarely lead with their best deals in plain sight, and this is no exception. The 10% doesn't stack with many other promotions, and you'll be prompted to create an account, which nets you access to FLX Cash (the brand's reward points system), some exclusive drops, and early dibs on new releases - which may or may not be useful depending on how badly you want to own yet another variation of the Nike TN.
There’s also free shipping with FLX membership, though standard delivery isn’t daylight robbery either - £4.99 for orders under £35, with 2-4 business days as the estimated timeframe. Returns are free, commendably easy to process online, and available by post and in-store. If you are the sort of person who breaks into a cold sweat at the idea of returning shoes, this might bring a touch of calm to checkout.
Among the headline drops is the new ON Cloudzone running shoe, marketed with the kind of hushed reverence usually reserved for a Scandinavian speaker launch. ON has been having a moment - an extremely prolonged, hype-driven moment - thanks to its clean lines, sensible comfort and an aesthetic that whispers "I do yoga but also mortgage brokering." The Cloudzone follows the same terrain, and like previous ON models, they're visually interesting without being loud.
Are they groundbreaking? Not especially. But they'll get you through a short run or long walk without torpedoing your feet. Currently listed at around £140, we've seen occasional 20% voucher codes appear across Foot Locker’s rotating monthly sales, with the rare bundle deal sneaking onto the site during seasonal promotions. It isn’t the cheapest ON stockist online, but you’re paying mostly for availability here. And a shade of corporate storytelling.
The Zendaya Edit is exactly what you’d expect from a campaign tied to the universally adored actor-slash-fashion-icon - a lot of mids and neutrals, a dash of effortless-looking cool, and just enough exclusivity to make you click. The featured picks lean heavily on comfort brands: Puma, Nike, New Balance, with minimal risk-taking. It’s style by consensus. The edit feels curated for someone with a sharp eye but not a desire to suffer for fashion. Which, frankly, most of us can get behind.
Meanwhile, the Crocs Echo Wave continues Foot Locker’s surprisingly intense relationship with the foam clog apocalypse. Are they ridiculous? Yes. Are they flying off shelves? Also yes. You already know where you stand on Crocs - and likely won't be swayed by slick carousel photography or "New Forms" taglines. But at £69.99 and falling slightly below that with certain vouchers, they’re one of the few items where Foot Locker undercuts some larger online retailers. A small victory, but we'll take it.
Foot Locker does have a dedicated release calendar - helpful if you're tracking down the next Yeezy alternative or curious about whether grown adults really do queue for triple black New Balance. Sales happen semi-regularly, though very few products hit what you’d call genuine bargain territory. Limited releases rarely come at reduced prices outside of warehouse clearance events, by which point you're sifting through sizes 6 and 13, and only in neon lime.
Voucher codes crop up every few weeks, often tied to member emails or seasonal moments (holiday weekends, back-to-school, etc.). It's worth noting that many of these promos exclude high-profile drops - so while it’s helpful for a sensible sports bra or a backup pair of Reebok Club C 85s, don’t expect a sudden 25% off the Cloudmonster.
In a world thick with sneakerhead jargon and the constant threat of artificial scarcity, Foot Locker provides a surprisingly unfrantic way to pick up solid footwear. The site won’t always be the cheapest, nor the most inventive, but it does offer assurance. Its long-standing relationships with Nike, adidas, and New Balance mean you’ll often see mid-release colours or minor exclusives that don’t circulate widely. And its return policy is refreshingly sane, especially compared to certain marketplaces where your only option seems to involve cryptocurrency and regret.
As for the 10% signup discount - treat it as a polite handshake, not a grand gesture. The real play here is patience: keep half an eye on the sales calendar, know when to pounce with a promo code, and avoid impulse-buying based on influencer edits. Even Zendaya would understand.
Last updated:
⭐ Rating: 3.5 / 5 (66 votes)