Six major retailers offering £6 off Pampers nappies – here’s how parents can claim

THE Money Saving Experts have revealed how you can get a whopping £6 off Pampers in six major stores.

Asda, Boots the Co-op and more could be offering the incredible discount – and here’s how it works.

Money Saving Experts have revealed how you can get £6 off nappiesPeter Jordan

A post on the Money Saving Expert’s X account alerted followers to the deal.

It read: “Here’s how you can get £6 off Pampers nappies at Asda, Boots, Coop and more. Plus dozens of other ways to save on your shopping.”

To get the money off first download the Pampers Club app and use code DOWNLOAD6OFF on signing up to get a coupon for £6 off Pampers Premium Protection.

The coupon can also be used for New Baby nappies and is valid at Asda, Tesco, Morrisons, Sainsbury’s, Co-op, or Boots until Sunday 30 June.

It’s valid for new sign-ups, and anyone who’s signed up within the last 30 days.

It comes as in 2023 Aldi shoppers rushed to buy “bargain” nappies for just 79p a pack, making them nearly £4 cheaper than Pampers.

Eagle-eyed fans of the supermarket spotted Mamia Newborn Premium packs of 24 nappies sold for under a £1.

And a major supermarket has made a big change to baby formula pricing, branding it a “moral obligation”.

Iceland is slashing the price of SMA baby formula powder, making it the cheapest chain to sell the brand.

The frozen food specialist is selling 800g tubs of SMA’s Little Steps formula milk for £7.95 – which is £1.80 cheaper than its rivals.

Shoppers will be able to pick the formula up both online and in stores.

It comes after Iceland also cut the price of three Aptamil lines back in January.

These lines include Aptamil 800g First Infant Milk, Aptamil 800g Growing Up Milk, and Aptamil 800g Follow-on Milk.

Richard Walker, executive chairman of Iceland Foods, said: “Families with babies are still struggling with the cost-of-living crisis and we have a moral obligation to take action. 

“That is why we are heaping further pressure on the manufacturers, the regulators and the market as a whole to bring prices down, just like Iceland is doing.”

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said formula prices had risen by a quarter over the past two years.

The regulator has been investigating the baby milk market after finding it was vulnerable to higher-than-inflation price rises.

   

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