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Buying clothes online used to be considered a bit dicey. Fit was a gamble, colours didn’t match the photos, and everything smelled vaguely of warehouse. But the bar for disappointment has steadily lowered, and these days, we're more open to the idea of a Breton tee turning up in a… Buying clothes online used to be considered a bit dicey. Fit was a gamble, colours didn’t match the photos, and…
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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 be considered a bit dicey. Fit was a gamble, colours didn’t match the photos, and everything smelled vaguely of warehouse. But the bar for disappointment has steadily lowered, and these days, we're more open to the idea of a Breton tee turning up in a supermarket-branded box. Which brings us to Tu Clothing, the fashion arm of Sainsbury’s, the UK supermarket giant better known for groceries than garment innovation. Yet here it is, quietly plugging away with basics, brands, school uniforms - and now, a modest 20% off selected lines. Enough to pique interest, if not pulse rates.
Tu Clothing has never promised runway theatrics. This isn’t a capsule edit dreamt up by an anonymous "global creative director." It’s clothes that will, for the most part, do their job - keeping you warm, staying in one piece, washing without existential crisis. That a fair few of them are made from recycled fibres and offer inclusive sizing is notable, even if Sainsbury’s doesn’t bring it up in glowing neon.
On the women’s side, Tu leans heavily on stripes, safe florals, and denim that understands the assignment. The Reaktiv line, pitched as "performance wear," is squarely in ‘Sunday yoga’ territory rather than 'spectacle of movement', but it goes on sale often and ships surprisingly quickly. Currently, you’ll find 20% off selected labels, including Finery and Sosandar - high street-adjacent brands that play nicely with work-adjacent wardrobes. Many of these items are available for Click & Collect within 2–3 working days or home delivery from £3.95 (free if you hit the slightly aspirational £50 threshold).
Men’s clothing at Tu continues its low-key project of dressing people who might describe their style as "fine." There are straight-cut jeans, functional jumpers, and a quietly persuasive five-pack of cotton boxers. No one is pretending these are wardrobe-transforming pieces. But if you need a pair of chinos that won’t go shiny after three washes, or a plain T-shirt that behaves in the tumble-dryer, Tu delivers - in both senses.
Prices are rarely shocking. A straightforward men’s sweatshirt hovers under £20. The occasional brand crossover, like Union Works, adds marginal flair. Discount codes are more occasional than regular, though signing up for marketing gets you 10% off your first order, which is more reliable than most retail loyalty claims. And yes, returning items is relatively painless - there’s a 30-day window, and you can do it via post or in-store, without the usual bureaucratic theatre.
Where Tu quietly excels is in children’s clothing, especially schoolwear. Things arrive when they say they will. Labels survive the wash. Fastenings work as intended. Pack deals on polo shirts work out to roughly the price of a sandwich, and somehow look better after three terms than you’d reasonably expect. Kids' raincoats feel more expensive than they are (always a dangerous quality in anything).
The babywear section is, as babywear tends to be, a masterclass in strategically deployed cuteness. Sleepsuits come in multipacks. Dungarees are designed to survive drool and drama. A fair number are organic or Oeko-Tex certified, which will appeal to anyone who has done late-night Googling on "safe baby fabrics" while holding a bottle in one hand.
Tu’s recent merger into Argos’s account system isn’t exactly seamless - it’s more "functional with a few sighs." You now need an Argos login to buy anything on the Tu site, which is mildly irritating if you haven’t shopped there since the catalogue era. But once inside, things generally behave. Orders process predictably. Email communication is prompt. Delivery usually arrives undramatically, which, as anyone who’s had a hoodie marooned in a depot for 12 days can attest, is a minor triumph.
Shipping is where the math occasionally feels less friendly - £3.95 for standard home delivery, unless you reach that magical £50 free shipping threshold. Click & Collect is more appealing: free, and usually takes just 2–3 working days. It’s not as nimble as Amazon, but Tu isn’t in a hurry, and neither should you be.
Yes, in the same way you might buy three types of hummus to avoid committing to a single one. Tu Clothing isn’t revolutionary, but it is thoughtfully competent - and sometimes, competence is exactly what you want. The 20% off offers aren't seismic, but they do nudge a reasonably priced range into slightly better-value territory. If you’re already placing a Sainsbury’s shop or wandering near an Argos, it’s worth a look. You might come for the sensible school coat or joggers-that-aren’t-horrible, and leave with a sense that, just maybe, fashion doesn't need to be complicated to work.
Or at the very least, you’ll know where to get a non-grating striped T-shirt for under a tenner that you won’t hate next month.
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⭐ Rating: 4.4 / 5 (4 votes)