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By now, we’ve all become somewhat immune to the feeling of online shopping-induced regret. The clunky skateboard that seemed like a good idea at midnight. The scooter deck purchased in a haze of aspirational Instagram reels. Fortunately, the return policies have - mostly - caught up with our reality. SkateHut,…By now, we’ve all become somewhat immune to the feeling of online shopping-induced regret. The clunky skateboard that seemed like…
Ends: Tomorrow
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
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.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
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By now, we’ve all become somewhat immune to the feeling of online shopping-induced regret. The clunky skateboard that seemed like a good idea at midnight. The scooter deck purchased in a haze of aspirational Instagram reels. Fortunately, the return policies have - mostly - caught up with our reality. SkateHut, a UK-based action sports retailer with a warehouse full of wheels and mildly rebellious dreams, understands this about its customers. So it dangles just enough deals to keep things interesting, without pretending a scooter will change your life. Still, if you’re on the hunt for a longboard or some trucks that won’t blow up your bank account, its current offers are worth a quick look - even if only for the reminder that sometimes £19.95 gets you a functional helmet, and nothing more.
The core of SkateHut’s sale section is refreshingly low-key. Think items that were never going to be headline news, but quietly get the job done. The Rampage Plain Third Complete Skateboard, for example, is down to £19.95 from £39.95. No, it won’t turn you into the next Ryan Sheckler - not even a sideways tribute act - but at that sub-£20 price, it's hard to complain. Just note that with discount boards, you’re paying for rideability, not prestige.
Value continues across the protective gear line. REKD Ramp Knee Pads start at £19.95, and while they won’t win any design awards, your knees probably don't care. The SkateHut Basic Pad Set, from £9.95, is minimal but sufficient, not unlike that piece of IKEA furniture you’ve never managed to throw out because it still somehow works.
New arrivals skew fancier - at least in name. Arbor’s lineup of complete skateboards and longboards comes with a whiff of boutique outdoorsiness, even if most will spend their lives dodging bins and double yellows. Models like the Arbor Legacy Oso Spellbound Complete Longboard (£149.95) come fully assembled and visually impressive. The boards are handsome, made with sustainably sourced wood, but priced firmly in the "you’d better ride this thing" category.
The Nitro Circus Ryan Williams Signature 500 Scooter Deck in Ano Gold (£139.95) offers a bit of celebrity stunt dust, if you’re into that sort of thing. The anodised finish genuinely looks good - and is less prone to chipping than paint. But again, this isn’t a breakthrough in ride technology. It’s a very solid deck with a pro’s name on it. In short: nice, not necessary.
Smaller updates like the CORE Hollow V2 Scooter Wheel at £32.99 may interest the pickier scooter crowd. Hollow cores reduce weight - marginal gains, if you believe in that sort of thing. And Oxford’s V2 Low Trucks (149mm, £34.95) come in surprisingly shiny Neochrome and satisfyingly subtle Raw and Black. They’re serviceable, middle-of-the-road trucks without any delusions of grandeur.
Where the site gets interesting - if not exactly adrenaline-pumping - is with its catch-all "Selling Fast" deals. The Rampage Full Size Launch Ramp is currently half off at £29.95. You could argue whether or not it’s "full size," but it functions well enough to boost a scooter or launch a scratchy ollie. Madd Gear’s Carve Kruzer commuter scooter (£54.95, down from £59.95) sits firmly in the category of acceptable adult compromise: neither sporty nor cool, but highly tolerable for getting to the shop.
SkateHut allows returns for 30 days via an online portal, as long as the item isn't clearly thrashed or hastily reassembled. Refund timing depends, as usual, on your payment method and the alignment of several non-public-facing accounting processes, but things seem to move within a week or so. For shipping, standard UK delivery starts at around £2.95, typically arriving in two to three working days, with express options for the impatient or genuinely late.
There’s also a 5% off welcome code if you’re new and willing to part with an email address. The student discount gives 10%, although it’s best not to examine how much you need to spend before that begins to feel significant. And yes, they occasionally offer voucher codes, especially during holidays, but they’re rarely flashy. Again, this isn’t a hype machine - it’s a skate shop.
SkateHut isn’t trying to turn your head with revolutionary tech or mystifying bundles. It sells boards and parts that work, sometimes at decent prices, often not wildly marked up to begin with. When something’s on sale, it usually deserves to be: a last season ride, an overstocked helmet, a product slightly confused about its own target audience. That’s fine. For most of us, skating or scootering is an intermittent hobby best supported with competent gear and low-stakes financial investment. This is the space that SkateHut quietly occupies - no kickflips of marketing language required.
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⭐ Rating: 3.5 / 5 (15 votes)