Unfortunately, this deal has expired 14 May 2020.
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Posted 15 April 2020

Amazon Prime offering no rush delivery gives £1 promo credit when you spend £10 or more

£10
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About this deal

This deal is expired. Here are some options that might interest you:

Please shop responsibly. As Coronavirus uncertainty develops, we are seeing a lot of community demand for basic household items. Please do consider others - we all need to work together to ensure everyone gets what they need. So please don’t stockpile, and perhaps offer to help older neighbours, family or friends by sourcing items for them.
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About FREE No-Rush Delivery

No-Rush Delivery Terms & Conditions – UK

Prime customers who choose No-Rush Delivery at checkout will receive a promotional reward worth £1 to redeem on items sold by Amazon on amazon.co.uk (the “Offer”).

Eligibility For No-Rush Promotional Reward
• The Offer applies to certain Prime items sold by Amazon at the website amazon.co.uk, excluding giftcards/wrap and items in the following categories Baby, Drugstore, Grocery including infant formula, certain e-cigarettes and cartridges for e-cigarettes (“Qualifying Items”).
• To qualify for the Offer you must, during the Offer Period:
  • be a Prime member
  • spend £10 or more on either a single Qualifying Item or on Qualifying Items that can be shipped together
  • use a payment method with a UK billing address
  • have a delivery address eligible for Prime Delivery, including No-Rush Delivery.
• All UK addresses are eligible for No-Rush Delivery.
• Amazon Business Prime customers are not eligible for the Offer.
• The Offer is a limited time offer, commencing on 14 April 2020 and intended to end on 14 May 2020 (the “Offer Period”).
• Your promotional reward is valid from when your Qualifying Items are dispatched until 14 June 2020 as shown in the confirmation email sent toyou.
• If you return a Qualifying Item, Amazon reserves the right to cancel your promotional reward or, if it has been redeemed, charge you (using the payment method you used for your original order and without further notice) the value of the promotional reward.





Using Your No-Rush Promotional Reward

• Your promotional reward will be applied to your amazon.co.uk account (“Account”) once a Qualifying Item is dispatched.
• The promotional reward can only be redeemed on items sold by Amazon, excluding alcohol, baby and infant formula, gift cards/wrap and items sold within warehouse deals (“Eligible Products”).
• Your promotional reward may only be redeemed against Eligible Products sold by Amazon EU S.à r.l. from amazon.co.uk. The Offer cannot be redeemed against Amazon digital products, including software/content or marketplace items sold by our third party selling partners.
• During the next purchase of an Eligible Product the promotional rewardwill be automatically deducted from the overall purchase amount.
• You will see the promotional reward amount applied in your Order Summary automatically. There is no limit on how many promotional rewards can be used on an order containing Eligible Products.
• Your promotional reward will be allocated proportionately among all Eligible Products in your order starting with the oldest valid promotional reward if you have more than one.
• To redeem your promotional reward, you must have an Account and you must be located in the UK.
• If you use our Buy Now ordering method by selecting the “Buy Now” button, your promotional reward will automatically be deducted from your order.
• If you place an order using a promotional reward and return that order, the promotional reward cannot be refunded or re-used. Your refund will equal the amount you paid for each Eligible Product subject to applicable refund policies.
• Your promotional reward may not be used on pre-existing orders.


General Terms
• The Offer is non-transferable and cannot be resold.
• These No-Rush Delivery Terms & Conditions are subject to change.

The Offer is subject to availability and may be withdrawn, modified, extended and/or amended without notice.
• The Offer has no cash alternative.
• Amazon’s Conditions of Use & Sale apply.
• The Offer is a delivery offer related to your Amazon Prime membership; it is not a discount on Qualifying Items purchased.

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Community Updates
miffyl's avatar
19059779571586935150.jpg
On this basis it's no rush for me even if I was in a rush!
Edited by a community support team member, 22 April 2020
New Comment

275 Comments

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  1. ACEACE's avatar
    vasya15/04/2020 05:36

    Comment deleted


    And what? The advice is dont go "out" for non-essential items, nothing about getting them delivered. People still need to live you know....
  2. MinerWilly's avatar
    I'm wondering if Prime subscribers will get an extra three months or so for free after the pandemic ends, after all I paid for 12 months of next day delivery.. (edited)
  3. drake31's avatar
    vasya15/04/2020 05:36

    Comment deleted


    Tell Them in charge, that they use too much packaging for 95% of there products when small items come in massive boxes sometimes.
  4. SargoTechniks's avatar
    I thought most prime deliveries are couple of days now anyway? I havent seen an item available for next day deliery for good 2 weeks now everything Ive ordered on prime came few days later instead of the usual next day (edited)
  5. SamJHW's avatar
    deleted160502715/04/2020 05:56

    Ethical consumers? Nice try, kidda


    If the consumers were truly ethical, they probably wouldn’t be shopping at Amazon

    FYI (I am an amazon shopper myself)
  6. Oneday77's avatar
    If we only order essential items, Amazon will need 99% less pickers.
  7. drumboe's avatar
    cantthinkofone_15/04/2020 07:19

    Stopped using Amazon after last week when I ordered AirPods and the box …Stopped using Amazon after last week when I ordered AirPods and the box came completely empty.


    Not completely empty.

    You received the 'air'.
  8. fireman1's avatar
    neravarine15/04/2020 07:36

    Least they can do, pay a yearly sub for Prime delivery which is …Least they can do, pay a yearly sub for Prime delivery which is non-existent


    Don't forget about the brand new movies they put on prime video. 3 men and a baby and teen wolf are only just off the cinema.
  9. deleted103369's avatar
    I wish there was an option to combine all my orders into one shipment when I make a new order. I had 3 deliveries over the last few days and because they were ordered separately they came on 3 different days, if I'd ordered them together (they were promotional items so I couldn't "Hold" the order for later) it would have given me the option to merge the orders, but because they were separate I couldn't choose to hold all orders until they were all ready.

    EDIT: Before anyone else replies saying something about different warehouses I'll copy my reply from below...

    > Whilst it would be preferable to get them all in one box, just having less visits from a delivery driver would be a benefit in the current climate! (edited)
  10. deleted1605027's avatar
    Ethical consumers? Nice try, kidda
  11. drumboe's avatar
    SamJHW15/04/2020 06:53

    If the consumers were truly ethical, they probably wouldn’t be shopping at …If the consumers were truly ethical, they probably wouldn’t be shopping at Amazon FYI (I am an amazon shopper myself)


    There is nothing 'unethical' about shopping at Amazon.
  12. DBarwell's avatar
    Almost everything on prime now takes 2+ weeks to deliver.

    All you're doing getting no rush delivery is helping a company that doesn't pay much in taxes save money to not pay anymore in taxes.

    Stick to prime, stuff the £1.
  13. decosparkle25's avatar
    yorkshiretightass15/04/2020 07:22

    I've always had this option? Take slow delivery and receive £1 Amazon …I've always had this option? Take slow delivery and receive £1 Amazon token which can only be spent on Amazon-sold items and has an expiry date. Utterly useless.


    Didn't they get rid of this ages ago? I always used to go for this option but it's not been around for a long time now.
  14. ACEACE's avatar
    Going about like nothing has changed? I'm in doors have been wfh for 5 weeks, havent seen friends and family in over 2 months, go asda once every two weeks....yh I'm killing thousands! If amazon is open it is their responsibility, if they are open to make profit then how am I shoving responsibility on them? It's better people like you stay behind the sofa with their hands over their eyes.. I will buy what I want when I want withings the rules set by the government..
  15. Proj's avatar
    cantthinkofone_15/04/2020 07:19

    Stopped using Amazon after last week when I ordered AirPods and the box …Stopped using Amazon after last week when I ordered AirPods and the box came completely empty.


    I have been with amazon from last 5-6 years and not even once my order turned up dodgy or empty. I have ordered more then few thousand times in last n years.
  16. ACEACE's avatar
    thecaptaine15/04/2020 08:19

    It is exactly this sought of selfish thinking that has us in the current …It is exactly this sought of selfish thinking that has us in the current state of lockdown to begin with. Wonder why it's called common sense when it's clearly in very short supply. Living large can wait when there literally thousands who are dying. If you really put your mind to it, you'll realise how little we need to live. Stay home and be respectful to others.


    Your deluded mate. The moto of the moment is "stay at home, save lives". If amazon staff are working, what different does it make what I order? Essential or non essential? If amazon is open they have a duty of care to their staff.

    Its people like you, hiding behind their sofas waiting for the world to end, who need a reality check.

    Thanks to my amazon order for a toy, I'm killing thousands...your thought process makes me cringe!
  17. ACEACE's avatar
    XNET15/04/2020 09:13

    You don't need non essential items to live.


    Do u watch TV? Yes u do, that's not essential, but there are still 100s of people going about making sure it's on.....the hypocrisy is damning at this moment!
  18. mcsmik's avatar
    this essential non essential bull is getting to my nerves, as someone gets to label what's essential for everyone seemingly
  19. yorkshiretightass's avatar
    I've always had this option? Take slow delivery and receive £1 Amazon token which can only be spent on Amazon-sold items and has an expiry date. Utterly useless.
  20. neravarine's avatar
    Least they can do, pay a yearly sub for Prime delivery which is non-existent
  21. deleted1931963's avatar
    deleted10336915/04/2020 07:13

    I wish there was an option to combine all my orders into one shipment when …I wish there was an option to combine all my orders into one shipment when I make a new order. I had 3 deliveries over the last few days and because they were ordered separately they came on 3 different days, if I'd ordered them together (they were promotional items so I couldn't "Hold" the order for later) it would have given me the option to merge the orders, but because they were separate I couldn't choose to hold all orders until they were all ready.


    They often don't come from the same warehouse. One may come from Manchester, Munich, and Milton Keynes
  22. david_robinson94's avatar
    Amazon should be refunding all prime membership fees seeing as they no longer offer the primary benefit which is next day delivery.
  23. Dylan1357's avatar
    Received £3 worth of cotton wool balls on next day delivery DPD... Made no sense, non-essential by all means.
  24. deleted2344480's avatar
    deleted10336915/04/2020 07:13

    I wish there was an option to combine all my orders into one shipment when …I wish there was an option to combine all my orders into one shipment when I make a new order. I had 3 deliveries over the last few days and because they were ordered separately they came on 3 different days, if I'd ordered them together (they were promotional items so I couldn't "Hold" the order for later) it would have given me the option to merge the orders, but because they were separate I couldn't choose to hold all orders until they were all ready.



    There is, on check out rather than selecting next day delivery, select Prime Day Delivery instead and choose your preferred day.

    I have mine set for a friday, no matter what I order or when i order it, it all comes in a friday and most of the time all in one box.
  25. skeeter909's avatar
    thecaptaine15/04/2020 09:01

    Yeah, exactly what I expected from you. Why don't you pack your bags and …Yeah, exactly what I expected from you. Why don't you pack your bags and go to Bali and slurp your smoothie whilst you're at it? Because of people like you going about like nothing in the world has changed, you are putting others at risk including yourself. People who are sorting your delivery item, preparing it for delivery and ultimately delivering it are all at risk because of YOUR selfishness. It's about reducing exposure. It's not about whether they are open for business or not. Where is your sense of moral duty and responsibility? Don't just shove that responsibility on others including Amazon.I don't expect you to get it. Go ahead and continue buying items like this pandemic didn't occur at all and continue your entitled life.


    I agree to an extent, there is a pervasive attitude and complacency amongst people not directly affected (jobs, money, health, death in family) due to the isolation there is a tendency to become tuned out or blockade things. The idea we are just going to ride this out reading books, surfing hotukdeals, learning to cook, zoom meeting etc comfortably from our armchairs. Cognitive dissonance also a factor here. Back in December , Europeans and Americans thought if the wuhan situation as being their problem and won’t affect us much if at all. By jan people still hadn’t cottoned on or prepped up. Even in february travellers still skiing in France in Italy despite the outbreak. Now we’re at home trying to keep mentally and physically in shape and Amazon and netflixx play a part in that mental survival. Over time, that need will be replaced with other basic survival requirement should this really drag out - although if things get grim and we get to zombie apocalypse point I will order a cricket bat from amazon.
  26. herby247's avatar
    ACEACE15/04/2020 07:15

    And what? The advice is dont go "out" for non-essential items, nothing …And what? The advice is dont go "out" for non-essential items, nothing about getting them delivered. People still need to live you know....


    At the risk of the delivery drivers health.
    People are so selfish.
    The reason this is even a deal and prime isn't currently next day is because of the amount of drivers off sick or self isolating.
    Essential supplies, medical and things you can't live without, no people see that as a green light to order all sorts of nonsense.
    I am a postie key worker classed as essential, yet limited PPE has been provided and have seen first hand snow sledges and Christmas trees being delivered.
    And before you give it keeping you in a job etc, I want to be alive to have a job, not died delivering someones items that could have waited post pandemic.
    Other thing RM staff have the godsend of sick pay when off, Amazon staff don't which is why so many are still working.
    Think before your next order, do you REALLY need it? (edited)
  27. TheRealDealHuntsman's avatar
    SargoTechniks15/04/2020 05:14

    I thought most prime deliveries are couple of days now anyway? I havent …I thought most prime deliveries are couple of days now anyway? I havent seen an item available for next day deliery for good 2 weeks now everything Ive order on prime came few days later instead of the usual next day


    You can still earn the £1 aslong as the item shows Prime delivery. For example, the Echo Dot shows Prime delivery for Monday. However if you select 'no rush' delivery, you earn the £1 and it will arrive Thursday instead.

    The majority of Prime deliveries are a few days longer currently (still eligible for this deal), however some items are still next day, such as healthcare items, certain foods etc.

    40416172-RqQBo.jpg (edited)
  28. LordHippos's avatar
    Searcher215/04/2020 07:36

    You can choose a delivery day can't you? So for example if you order …You can choose a delivery day can't you? So for example if you order today you could change you Amazon delivery day to Tuesday and then anything you order the rest of the week could also be ordered for delivery on your Amazon delivery day...they should all come together then. I use the Amazon delivery day option when I order something but I not sure about it...so it gives a few days to ponder and cancel. You won't get the £1 credit on this option though


    In my experience Amazon largely ignores the delivery day and ships stuff out sooner if they can. Even my subscribe and save stuff arrives separately and not on the specified date most of the time.
  29. skeeter909's avatar
    thecaptaine15/04/2020 08:19

    It is exactly this sought of selfish thinking that has us in the current …It is exactly this sought of selfish thinking that has us in the current state of lockdown to begin with. Wonder why it's called common sense when it's clearly in very short supply. Living large can wait when there literally thousands who are dying. If you really put your mind to it, you'll realise how little we need to live. Stay home and be respectful to others.


    I know it feels like that but the cause and effect linkage is not there. I agree that living large should be on hold especially when economic factors are kicking in and many many many people are struggling money and job wise. This impact is actually a bigger deal - the economic impact - longer term than the immediate viral rate although I am not saying people dying is not a big deal, it’s how the govts are handling it (nz aside). Someone used the analogy of an elephant that jumps off a cliff to avoid a mouse. I do wonder why all supermarkets have not mobilised to increase delivery operations / slots to reduce store traffic and risk and costs tho. Weren’t there headlines about hiring enmasse for delivery armies? Even vulnerable people have trouble getting slots , my daughter is one and can’t get anything so we drop supplies at her door once a week. (edited)
  30. thecaptaine's avatar
    ACEACE15/04/2020 07:15

    And what? The advice is dont go "out" for non-essential items, nothing …And what? The advice is dont go "out" for non-essential items, nothing about getting them delivered. People still need to live you know....


    It is exactly this sought of selfish thinking that has us in the current state of lockdown to begin with. Wonder why it's called common sense when it's clearly in very short supply. Living large can wait when there literally thousands who are dying. If you really put your mind to it, you'll realise how little we need to live. Stay home and be respectful to others.
  31. drumboe's avatar
    whosthatlol15/04/2020 08:44

    I love amazon but it treats staff like doo doo like sports direct and …I love amazon but it treats staff like doo doo like sports direct and thats not good.


    Personally I don't jump to conclusions
    based on individual reports that are often taken out of context, nearly always from the snowflake section of the social media virtual reality bubble.

    The fact is that the vast majority of Amazon workers don't seem to have any issues working for them.
  32. helloyoufool's avatar
    shame the £1 can't be donated to an Key Worker charity pot instead. Could raise some serious funds.
  33. lcm123's avatar
    I’ve used amazon to get essentials delivered to my grandmother for probably the last 2-3 years. It’s brilliant. During this time, it’s so valuable. I don’t mind the slower delivery and am really pleased the £1 reward has been brought back. I used to get a lot of kindle books this way. :-)
    As for the buying of non essentials, I don’t believe the amazon staff were complaining, merely observing. As most purchases are non essential then plenty of people can be taking advantage of this offer. So far, my purchases that I though might be delayed because they were not overly essential have been earlier than I expected. I guess it depends how busy and stocked your local distribution centre is. Right now amazon is vital for so many people, but for my grandmother and I, it’s been vital for years. I suspect other housebound people feel the same.
  34. Searcher2's avatar
    yorkshiretightass15/04/2020 07:22

    I've always had this option? Take slow delivery and receive £1 Amazon …I've always had this option? Take slow delivery and receive £1 Amazon token which can only be spent on Amazon-sold items and has an expiry date. Utterly useless.


    I don't know why you have had the option prior to this offer. It wouldn't have been utterly useless for many people. I used to make use of the digital credit Amazon used to offer if Prime customers chose standard delivery ... then they withdrew it. The current offer sounds more generous
  35. whosthatlol's avatar
    drumboe15/04/2020 07:02

    There is nothing 'unethical' about shopping at Amazon.


    I love amazon but it treats staff like doo doo like sports direct and thats not good.
  36. Captplatonic's avatar
    ACEACE15/04/2020 09:38

    Have u watched TV during the lockdown?


    Yes, but I haven't ordered one to be delivered and called it essential
  37. NotAnonymous's avatar
    donny126615/04/2020 07:23

    Asking for charitable donations to keep some staff fully paid whilst he’s g …Asking for charitable donations to keep some staff fully paid whilst he’s got more than he could spend in several lifetimes.


    Although factually correct that donations were requested (and still are to a lesser extent), it was a requirement of the fund used, not an actual request for donations. From Amazon:

    "We are not and have not asked for donations and the Amazon Relief Fund has been funded by Amazon with an initial donation of $25 million. The structure to operate a fund like this, which hundreds of companies do through the same third-party, requires the program to be open to public contributions but we are not soliciting those contributions in any way."

    snopes.com/fac…ve/
  38. niefoon's avatar
    Oneday7715/04/2020 07:27

    If we only order essential items, Amazon will need 99% less pickers.



    How do you define non-essential items. I needed office stuff because I'm working from home, to me that is essential because it enables me to do my job without damaging my health (monitor at the appropriate height, ergonomic keyboard and mouse etc). Some might consider that non-essential. How bout you come off that high horse of yours and look at reality for a change.
  39. raverdave2k's avatar
    Captplatonic15/04/2020 09:36

    I get your point, but if they're non-essential you don't need them to live …I get your point, but if they're non-essential you don't need them to live mate


    That depends on what you mean by "live". Yes we could all just be sat in a corner staring at a wall for the duration in which case we would only need food, water, medicine. However I don't consider that "living" nor has any government any where in the world suggested that it is remotely necessary.

    At the end of the day so long as the warehouse staff are practicing proper distancing and hygiene there is no issue.
    As for posties / delivery drivers? Can't think of a more isolated job so long as they are following the guidance which every delivery firm has introduced to leave the package, knock and retreat then again there is no issue.

    And no I'm not just hiding at home thinking I'm safe so screw everyone else. I work in a warehouse so I'm still going out most days and doing my job just with appropriate precautions applied.
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