Enjoy 20% discount in-app purchases
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Buying clothes online used to mean one of two things: scavenging clearance racks in digital form or surrendering your credit card to some slightly-too-trendy-for-comfort brand with an influencer-heavy Instagram feed and a checkout page designed by someone who assumes you’re thrilled to buy three pastel corset tops at full price.…Buying clothes online used to mean one of two things: scavenging clearance racks in digital form or surrendering your credit…
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
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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Buying clothes online used to mean one of two things: scavenging clearance racks in digital form or surrendering your credit card to some slightly-too-trendy-for-comfort brand with an influencer-heavy Instagram feed and a checkout page designed by someone who assumes you’re thrilled to buy three pastel corset tops at full price. Quiz, a high street staple that’s been operating for three decades, falls somewhere in between. It’s not trying to start a fashion revolution, and honestly, that might be its biggest strength.
Quiz may pitch itself at the "fashion-conscious women’s wear market," but this doesn’t quite capture it. The brand lives in familiar territory - formalwear for weddings you don’t want to be at, night-out dresses for nights you might regret, and jumpsuits that make you question whether you really need to use the bathroom. The designs are ultra-trendy, occasionally flashy, and almost always engineered for maximum style-per-pound value. That’s not a criticism. There are plenty of people who’d rather spend £35 on a sequin mini dress that looks good under bar lighting than £200 on something a stranger told them was "an investment piece."
If you’re looking for understated basics, look elsewhere. If you want a dress that might shed glitter on a stranger’s shoulder but cost less than your Uber fare, this is your place.
There are multiple ways to not pay full price on Quiz’s website, which is good news because paying full price for fast-ish fashion always feels a little like reading the small print on a cruise deal - technically fine, slightly unsettling. Students get 15% off via UNIDAYS, and new subscribers can snag 20% off their first order. Just be aware that "selected lines" are mysteriously off-limits. These are never made especially obvious, which feels charmingly retro. It’s like the terms and conditions of a 90s mail-in rebate, only digital.
The homepage - when it’s not gently nudging you about cookies (yes, we noticed) - reminds visitors about the Quiz app, which comes with "exclusive offers." The app isn’t mandatory, but it is one of those quiet mechanisms brands like to use to ping you with weekly "flash sales" that are neither entirely flash nor strictly sales.
Standard UK delivery is £3.99 and takes three to five working days. Express shipping is available, though you’ll pay around £5.99 for the privilege of not waiting until next week to try on three near-identical bodycon dresses in your hallway. There’s also the QVIP Delivery Pass: £9.99 gets you unlimited free next-day shipping for a year. If Quiz is your one-stop shop for dopamine dresses or heavily ruched occasionwear, then it might be worth it.
Returns are standard: you get 14 days from receipt to send things back. Not ideal if, like many of us, you sometimes forget you ordered the item in the first place. Just be warned: returns aren’t free. You'll need to pay for postage unless you’re near a Quiz store, in which case you can return in person and be reminded of what shop lighting does to your self-esteem.
Quiz’s strengths are pretty clear: trend-based clothing at relatively low prices, with enough coupon codes and "limited time" offers to keep the dopamine loop spinning. But with fast fashion come the usual trade-offs - some items can feel cheaper than they look online, sizing isn’t always consistent (though they do offer Petite and Curve ranges), and yes, quality sometimes lives just south of "festival-acceptable."
Still, there’s something charming about how aware Quiz seems of its role. It doesn't promise life-changing fashion revelations. It promises an outfit you can wear, maybe twice, maybe more, without feeling like you’ve financially overcommitted to leopard print mesh. Some things are trend-proof.
Quiz isn’t avant garde. It’s not minimalist. It’s almost aggressively not normcore. But it knows exactly what it’s doing - and at least it’s not pretending you need another seasonless, artisanal blazer. Download the app if you want the extra 10% off. Don’t, if you're allergic to notifications. Just maybe avoid white bodycon if your event involves red wine and unstable seating.
QUIZ offers a range of UK delivery options, all costed with the kind of symmetry accountants dream of—£3.99 for standard, Yodel, InPost, or Asda ToYou, each promising arrival within 3–5 working days. Next day delivery is £5.99, assuming the stars (and your order time) align. Orders placed after 7pm on weekdays or 3pm Sunday will be fashionably late.
Those who prefer to pick up rather than wait can use the free "Order into Store" option, which takes up to 24 hours in select stores or up to 5–7 working days elsewhere, depending on location. A 14-day retrieval window applies, after which your outfit returns to sender and your refund follows.
There’s also a £9.99 annual “QVIP” pass for those who dislike paying for shipping more than once a year. Free delivery on everything, no minimum spend, no surprises—except perhaps how quickly you forget you paid for it.
International delivery is available from £5.99 and takes 3–10 working days. If your parcel disappears into the ether, QUIZ asks you to wait 25 working days before getting in touch. Patience, it seems, is part of the service.
Returns are possible, though not always free. QUIZ offers various return methods, including Yodel and Royal Mail. If you ordered online but prefer to speak to a person, in-store returns are also allowed. The details vary slightly depending on how and where you bought the item, but the general principle is: return it in good condition, and they’ll refund you. Eventually.
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