Technology

Save $15 when you spend $50+ on home essentials from Amazon — no Prime membership required

a group of stasher bags filled with food next to a checkered cloth on a white countertop

SAVE $ 15: For a limited time, you can save $ 15 when you spend at least $ 50 on select household essentials via Amazon using the promo code E706F237 (which should apply automatically at checkout). The offer is open to Prime members and non-Prime shoppers alike.


household essentials featured in an amazon promotion

Credit: Glad / Glade / Stasher / Charmin / Mashable composite

Amazon Prime Day is typically (and justifiably) associated with dopamine-boosting doorbusters like $ 99 43-inch Fire TVs, $ 750 MacBook Airs, and sub-$ 20 smart home devices, but we often see equally worth-it deals on everyday household essentials during the event. It’s an underrated opportunity to save a little bit extra on the boring stuff you probably have to re-up anyway.

This year’s Prime Day sale wrapped up on June 12, but a lot of decent deals are still live as of Thursday, June 13 — including an offer that knocks $ 15 off when you spend at least $ 50 on select kitchen, bathroom, and cleaning products. The best part? You don’t need a Prime membership to unlock access to it.

The deal applies to over 1,000 items sitewide, from a three-pack of Charmin toilet paper to Stasher reusable silicone bags, Cascade dishwasher pods, Glade PlugIns refills, and some cherry blossom-scented Glad trash bags that would fit right in at Barbie‘s Dreamhouse. You can redeem it just by adding at least $ 50 worth of said items to your cart and checking out like normal; the coupon code E706F237 should apply automatically.

Amazon has run similar promotions within the past couple of months, but the nice thing about this one is that it’s an immediate, straight-up discount (as opposed to a credit for a future purchase). The only catch is that each customer can only use it once, so double-check that you’ve stocked up on everything you need before hitting “Place order.”

Mashable