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Online food delivery is now less a modern convenience and more an unremarkable fact of life - somewhere between contactless payments and inbox spam. But even the most seasoned takeaway orderer, who knows their Just Eat from their Deliveroo from their Uber Eats, may still raise an eyebrow at how…Online food delivery is now less a modern convenience and more an unremarkable fact of life - somewhere between contactless…
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Online food delivery is now less a modern convenience and more an unremarkable fact of life - somewhere between contactless payments and inbox spam. But even the most seasoned takeaway orderer, who knows their Just Eat from their Deliveroo from their Uber Eats, may still raise an eyebrow at how often a single Thai curry ends up costing half a day’s lunch budget. The food isn’t necessarily more expensive, but time and appetite tend to lower price sensitivity. Thankfully, Just Eat does offer the occasional discount, voucher code, and sale - assuming you know where to look, and when to deploy a touch of restraint.
Just Eat (www.just-eat.co.uk) still doesn’t market itself aggressively as a place for deals - this is not Groupon wearing a delivery driver's jacket. That said, there is a rotation of reasonably useful offers: codes for 10–20 percent off your next order, first-time user promotions (typically £5–£10 off), and the occasional restaurant-specific discount. Most of these don’t require spy-level sleuthing, but the best ones tend to appear either via email marketing or directly in the app, rather than in an official "Deals" hub on the site. Subtle, perhaps overly so.
Standard delivery charges range by restaurant and distance - expect anything from £0.99 to £4.50 unless your order qualifies for free delivery (usually tiered once you hit £15 to £25 minimums). Prices are what you'd expect: slightly inflated versus walking into the restaurant yourself, but not egregiously so. Mind the service fee, though - it tends to sneak in at checkout like a mildly smug footnote.
Occasionally, promotional codes become publicly available - often through third-party deal sites or newsletters. Predictably, these fall into three categories: useful current codes, expired ghosts helpfully displayed for clicks, and those fictional unicorns ("20OFFFOOD") that never worked for anyone but appear to have half the internet reciting them.
At publishing, Just Eat has been floating a few semi-dependable codes for repeat users (like "SAVE10" for 10% off selected orders), and more reliable incentives for new account holders - though keep in mind that Just Eat’s definition of "new" rarely fools its cookie-based memory. A burner email may technically qualify, but Just Eat tends to have a decent memory for addresses. Use tact.
The mobile app is more generous than the web version, which is both helpful and mildly annoying for those trying to stay off their phones. Offers often appear as small, unassuming banners: "Get 15% off when you spend £20." No fanfare, no countdown timers, just a quiet nudge from the digital periphery. It’s worth enabling notifications - not because Just Eat’s push content is thrilling, but because they’ll occasionally ping a genuinely useful deal at 6pm when your motivation to cook dies quietly beside the fridge.
Refunds are doable, but rarely instant. If your food arrives an hour late, cold, or resembling a modern art tribute to chicken, support is available - via chat or online forms. Refunds are sometimes partial (especially if you’ve eaten half), and often err on the side of store credit. As ever, disproportionate politeness helps. Complaining about mayonnaise incorrectly applied to a wrap may not win you a refund, but it will at least add some bureaucracy to the bite.
Just Eat delivers mostly what it promises: the food arrives, the charges vaguely align with expectations, and the irritations are manageable. Coupons and discount codes exist, but aren't integral to the experience. You won’t revolutionize your budget with 10% off a pizza, but you might feel marginally less annoyed about tipping a driver at 9:45pm. If you’re the kind of person who’d rather throw in a side of onion rings than waste time hunting for a £2 coupon, you’re not alone.
Still, a quiet discount here and there helps. Just don’t expect fireworks. Or contact with Just Eat’s elusive support team after 10pm. Or for your fries to survive the journey intact. Some things remain stubbornly resistant to digital optimisation.
Last updated:
⭐ Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 votes)