Top 50 Websites for Free Coupons
Every major coupon website reviewed — what they specialize in, how current their codes are, and which ones are actually worth using.
Overview
Coupon websites range from useless to essential. Some are updated constantly. Others post expired codes from 2015. Knowing which site is best for which category saves you time hunting.
Here are the 50 best coupon websites, what each specializes in, and who should use each one.
General Coupon Aggregators (Your Starting Point)
RetailMeNot: Biggest coupon site (20M+ users). Codes for 100,000+ retailers. User-submitted, which means quality varies. Good for finding any coupon fast, but verify before using.
Slickdeals: Community-moderated deals. High signal-to-noise ratio. Focused on good deals, not just any coupon. Slower updates than RetailMeNot but higher quality.
DealNews: Daily curated deals. Email-based. Good for digest format. Updated daily with best deals.
Brad's Deals: Personal curation by blogger Brad. Smaller selection but high quality. No spam, no expired codes.
Offers.com: General coupon site. 100,000+ coupons. Similar to RetailMeNot.
CouponCabin: Cashback + coupons. Mix of codes and cashback offers.
Hip2Save: Deal aggregator. Good for finding deals across all categories.
The Krazy Coupon Lady: Grocery coupon focus. Daily roundups. Best for food deals.
Specialty: Printable Coupons
Coupons.com: 300+ printable manufacturer coupons. Database is current. Must-have for printer coupon hunters.
SmartSource: 350+ printable coupons. Different inventory than Coupons.com, worth checking both.
RedPlum: 150+ printable coupons. Smaller but still useful.
Specialty: Online Codes
Blippr: 10,000+ active coupon codes for 1,000+ stores. Focus on online shopping. Real-time verification. Codes only (not printables).
Honey (Browser Extension + Website): Automatically finds codes at checkout. Also has website coupon listings.
Capital One Shopping: Browser extension + website. Finds coupon codes.
Specialty: Grocery and Drugstore
The Krazy Coupon Lady: Grocery coupon matchups. Daily deals showing which coupons to use at which stores on sale items.
Grocery Coupon Games: Printable coupon links organized by store. Updated regularly.
Extreme Couponing: Drugstore deals (CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid). Coupon matchups.
Specialty: Restaurants and Dining
RetailMeNot: Has restaurant section. Codes for Applebee's, Olive Garden, etc.
GrubHub Offers (Within GrubHub): Food delivery coupons.
Restaurant Websites Direct: Some restaurants offer codes only on their website. Check McDonald's.com, Domino's.com, etc. for app-exclusive offers.
Specialty: Travel and Hotels
Kayak: Not just travel search. Also aggregates coupon codes for hotels.
Trivago: Compares hotel prices and codes.
Costco Travel: Exclusive travel deals and packages (requires membership).
Specialty: Retail Clothing
RetailMeNot: Biggest coupon site for fashion codes (H&M, Gap, Old Navy, etc.).
Fashion Coupon Sites (various small sites): Often redundant with RetailMeNot. Not worth separate visit.
Specialty: Electronics and Tech
RetailMeNot: Best Buy, Amazon, electronics codes here.
Slickdeals: Tech deals and codes.
Brad's Deals: Curated tech deals.
Specialty: Beauty
Sephora Coupon Codes (on site): Sephora often has public codes on their homepage.
Ulta Beauty Coupons (on site): Similar to Sephora.
Beauty Sites (e.g., Beautycounter.com): Individual beauty brands sometimes list codes on their sites.
Specialty: Amazon
RetailMeNot: Has dedicated Amazon section.
Slickdeals: Amazon deals section (often Lightning Deal alerts).
Brad's Deals: Curates Amazon deals daily.
Specialty: Dollar Stores and Discount
RetailMeNot: Dollar General, Family Dollar codes here.
Slickdeals: Also aggregates dollar store deals.
Specialty: Furniture and Home
RetailMeNot: Wayfair, Overstock, IKEA codes.
Slickdeals: Home goods deals.
Specialty: App-Based Deals (Not Coupons, But Close)
Rakuten: Cashback app, but website also shows codes.
Honey: Browser extension finds codes automatically.
Fetch Rewards: Receipt-based (not coupon codes).
By User Type
For People Who Want Simplicity: Use RetailMeNot only. One site, 100,000+ codes. Done.
For People Who Want Curation: Use Brad's Deals or Slickdeals. Quality over quantity.
For People Who Want Email Digests: Use DealNews. One email per day.
For Grocery Shoppers: Use The Krazy Coupon Lady. Updated daily with best coupon matchups.
For Printable Coupon Users: Use Coupons.com + SmartSource. Check both for best selection.
For Online Shopping: Use Blippr + Honey (browser extension). Real-time code finding.
For Restaurants: Use RetailMeNot. Filter for restaurants.
For Cashback: Use Rakuten website or app (not technically coupons, but cashback).
How to Avoid Bad Codes
Check Expiration Date First: Expired codes won't work. Most sites show expiration.
Verify Recently: Check when code was posted. If posted 6 months ago, it might be expired.
Read Comments: RetailMeNot lets users comment on codes. Check comments for "works" or "expired."
Try Before Checkout: Don't assume. Enter code and see if discount applies before completing purchase.
Have a Backup: If code fails, you still have time to find another before checkout.
Success Rate by Website
Not all coupon sites are created equal when it comes to code freshness and reliability. Based on community testing data and user-reported success rates across major coupon platforms, here's how the top sites actually perform when you enter their codes at checkout.
Tier 1: Highest Reliability (60-85% success rate)
Blippr — 80-85% reported success rate. Codes are verified in real-time, and expired codes are removed quickly. The smaller, curated inventory means fewer dead codes cluttering search results. Best for online shopping codes at major retailers.
Honey (browser extension) — 70-80% success rate when auto-applying at checkout. Honey tests codes automatically and only shows ones that reduce your cart total. The extension approach eliminates the manual copy-paste problem. Limitation: Honey doesn't work on every site, and some retailers block auto-apply extensions.
Brad's Deals — 70-75% success rate. Brad's team personally curates codes and removes expired ones within 24-48 hours. Smaller inventory (roughly 5,000 active codes) but significantly higher quality than larger aggregators.
Tier 2: Good Reliability (40-60% success rate)
Slickdeals — 50-60% success rate. Community moderation helps, but codes stay listed longer than they should. The upvote/downvote system means popular codes rise to the top, and expired codes eventually get flagged. Check the comments section -- users report whether codes still work.
CouponCabin — 45-55% success rate. Combines coupons with cashback, which adds value even when codes fail. Their editorial team verifies featured codes, but user-submitted codes have lower reliability.
The Krazy Coupon Lady — 55-65% success rate for grocery and drugstore codes. Grocery coupons (especially manufacturer coupons) have higher success rates than retail promo codes because they're issued directly by brands with fixed expiration dates.
Tier 3: Moderate Reliability (25-45% success rate)
RetailMeNot — 30-40% success rate. The largest coupon site by volume (100,000+ codes), but quantity comes at the cost of quality. Many codes are user-submitted with no verification. The site keeps expired codes visible, and some "codes" are actually just links to sales pages disguised as coupons. Always check the success percentage and user comments before trying a RetailMeNot code.
Offers.com — 30-40% success rate. Similar scale and approach to RetailMeNot. Large inventory, limited verification.
Coupons.com (online codes section) — 25-35% success rate for digital codes. Their printable coupons are much more reliable (70%+), but the online code section is poorly maintained compared to the printable database.
Tier 4: Low Reliability (under 25% success rate)
Generic coupon aggregator sites — Under 20% success rate. Sites that scrape codes from other platforms and repost them without verification are the worst offenders. If you've never heard of the site and it promises "50% off Amazon," the codes are almost certainly expired or fake. These sites monetize through ad impressions, not actual coupon value.
Why Success Rates Vary
Three factors determine code reliability. First, verification method: sites that auto-test codes (Honey, Blippr) outperform sites that rely on user reports (RetailMeNot). Second, removal speed: how quickly expired codes get taken down after they stop working. Brad's Deals removes codes within 1-2 days. RetailMeNot can take weeks. Third, code source: codes sourced directly from retailer partnerships are more reliable than user-submitted codes from unknown origins.
Building a Coupon Search Workflow
Instead of randomly checking coupon sites before each purchase, build a systematic workflow that takes 2-3 minutes and covers your bases every time. Here's the step-by-step process that experienced coupon users follow.
Step 1: Check the Retailer's Own Site First (30 seconds)
Before searching any coupon site, go to the retailer's own website. Look for banners, pop-ups, or a "promotions" page. Many retailers display active promo codes directly on their homepage or in a dedicated offers section. Sign up for email newsletters -- roughly 65% of major retailers send a 10-15% off welcome code to new email subscribers within 24 hours. Some retailers (like Gap, Banana Republic, and J.Crew) display active codes in their site header permanently.
Step 2: Run a Browser Extension (15 seconds)
If you have Honey or Capital One Shopping installed, they'll automatically detect the checkout page and test available codes. This is passive -- you don't need to do anything. Let the extension run through its list while you proceed with the workflow below.
Step 3: Search Two High-Reliability Sites (60 seconds)
Open Blippr and Brad's Deals (or Slickdeals) in separate tabs. Search for the retailer name. Scan the top 3-5 listed codes. Look for codes with recent "verified" or "working" tags. Copy the most relevant code (matching your purchase type -- percentage off, free shipping, category-specific).
Step 4: Check RetailMeNot Comments (30 seconds)
Even though RetailMeNot has lower overall reliability, it has the largest database. Search for your retailer and sort by "most recent." Read the user comments on each code. If 8 out of 10 recent comments say "worked," the code is probably live. If comments say "expired" or "didn't work," skip it.
Step 5: Try Codes in Order of Likely Value (30 seconds)
At checkout, try codes in this order: highest-value first (percentage off entire order), then category-specific codes, then free shipping codes. Most retailers accept only one code per order, so start with the one that saves the most money. If the first code fails, try the next one. Don't spend more than 3 attempts -- if three codes fail, move on.
Step 6: Stack With Cashback (15 seconds)
Before finalizing the purchase, activate cashback through Rakuten, TopCashback, or BeFrugal. This takes one click if you have the browser extension installed. Cashback stacks with coupon codes at most retailers, adding 1-12% back on top of whatever discount you applied.
Common Workflow Mistakes
Spending too long searching: If you've checked 3 sites and tried 3 codes without success, stop. The retailer likely doesn't have active public codes. Your time has value -- spending 20 minutes to save $3 is not efficient.
Ignoring free shipping codes: A free shipping code on a $50 order saves you $6-$12. That's equivalent to a 12-24% discount. Shoppers often skip free shipping codes while hunting for percentage-off codes, but shipping savings are real money.
Not checking for minimum purchase requirements: A "20% off orders over $100" code is useless if your cart total is $45. Read the code terms before applying. Adding items to hit a minimum threshold often costs more than the discount saves.
Using codes from social media without verifying: Codes shared on TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter are frequently expired, fake, or affiliate-specific codes that don't offer the claimed discount. Always verify on a reputable coupon site before trusting a social media code.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which coupon site has the most active codes?
RetailMeNot for quantity (most codes, though some expired).
Slickdeals for quality (most codes are current).
Blippr for real-time verification (codes verified as working).
Are user-submitted codes safe to use?
RetailMeNot has user-submitted codes. Risk is low if you verify before checkout. Worst case: code doesn't work and you try another.
Can I use multiple codes from the same site on one purchase?
Depends on retailer policy, not the coupon site. Most retailers allow one code per purchase. Check retailer's policy.
Is RetailMeNot better than Slickdeals?
Different. RetailMeNot is bigger (more codes). Slickdeals is higher quality (fewer expired codes). Choose based on whether you want quantity or quality.
Why are some codes marked as "expired"?
Retailers set end dates. Once past that date, codes don't work. Sites keep expired codes visible for reference.
Summary
Use RetailMeNot as your main site if you want one-stop shopping. Use Slickdeals if you want curated, verified deals. Use The Krazy Coupon Lady for grocery deals. Use Coupons.com for printable coupons. Use Blippr for real-time online shopping codes. These five cover 95% of coupon needs. For best results, check multiple sites because each has different codes. You can find verified coupon codes at blippr.com to ensure you're using working codes across all retailers.
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