Who Doesn’t Love Free Stuff Arriving in the Post?
There’s something genuinely exciting about opening your door to find a little parcel you didn’t pay for. Free samples by post are one of the easiest ways to try new products without spending a penny — and there are more available in the UK than most people realise.
Brands give away samples because they want you to try their stuff and hopefully buy it later. But there’s no obligation. You get free products, they get their name out there. Everyone wins. The trick is knowing where to look and how to spot the genuine offers from the ones that waste your time.
The Best Places to Find Free Samples by Post in the UK
1. Freebies.co.uk (Obviously)
We’d be daft not to mention ourselves first. Our free stuff page is updated daily with the latest legitimate free samples, vouchers and giveaways available in the UK. If it’s worth having, it’s listed there. We verify offers and remove expired ones so you’re not clicking dead links.
2. Supermarket Websites
Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons all run regular free sample campaigns. These are usually:
- Tesco Clubcard Freebies — Log into your Clubcard account and check the “Rewards” section. Tesco regularly offers free product trials to Clubcard members.
- Asda Baby & Parent Club — If you’ve got little ones, sign up for free nappies, baby food samples and wipes.
- Sainsbury’s Brand Match — Occasionally runs product sampling campaigns with full-size items.
3. Beauty & Skincare Brands
Beauty brands are the most generous with samples. Here are the ones that regularly post freebies:
- Boots — Check the Boots app and website for “Freebie Friday” campaigns. They give away everything from moisturisers to mascaras.
- Superdrug — Their Beauty Studio section often has sample offers, especially for new product launches.
- L’Oréal, Dove, Nivea — All three regularly offer free sample requests through their UK websites. Sign up to their newsletters and you’ll get first dibs.
- Elemis & Liz Earle — Premium skincare brands that still give away surprisingly generous samples. Check our Elemis deals page for current offers.
4. Manufacturer Websites Direct
Many manufacturers run free sample programmes that you won’t find advertised anywhere else. The trick is to check the websites of brands you already use:
- Pet food companies — Purina, Royal Canin and Applaws all do free sample packs for cats and dogs.
- Laundry brands — Persil, Ariel and Fairy periodically offer free washing capsule samples.
- Cereal companies — Kellogg’s and Weetabix occasionally run breakfast sample campaigns.
5. Amazon Vine & Review Programmes
If you’re a regular Amazon shopper, look into Amazon Vine. Selected reviewers get free products in exchange for honest reviews. It’s invitation-only, but you can improve your chances by writing detailed, helpful reviews on your existing purchases.
How to Maximise Your Free Sample Haul
Sign Up for Brand Newsletters
This is the single most effective thing you can do. Brands email their subscribers first when free samples become available. By the time offers appear on social media, they’re often already gone. Create a dedicated email address for sign-ups if you’re worried about spam.
Follow Brands on Social Media
Instagram and Facebook are where brands announce flash freebies — sample drops that last just a few hours. Follow your favourite brands and turn on post notifications for the best results.
Use a Separate Email Address
You will get marketing emails. That’s the deal. Set up a free Gmail or Outlook account specifically for sample sign-ups and check it once a week. This keeps your main inbox clean and means you never miss a sample offer.
Be Quick
Popular free samples can run out within hours. When you spot a good offer, request it immediately. Add it to your bookmarks and check regularly. We post the best new free samples on our freebies page as soon as we find them.
Red Flags — How to Spot Fake Free Sample Offers
Not every “free sample” offer is genuine. Here’s what to watch out for:
- Requests for payment — A genuine free sample won’t ask you to pay postage. Some legitimate offers charge a nominal 99p for delivery, but if they’re asking for several pounds, it’s not free.
- Too much personal information — A real sample needs your name and address. That’s it. If they want your National Insurance number, bank details, or mother’s maiden name, walk away.
- Endless surveys before the sample — If you have to complete a 30-minute survey to “qualify” for a sample, your time is worth more than the product.
- Unrealistic promises — “Free iPhone samples” do not exist. Neither do “free iPad trials.” If it sounds too good, it is.
- Sketchy URLs — If the offer is on a URL that looks like free-iphones-2026.xyz, it’s not real. Stick to known brand websites and trusted aggregators.
What Kinds of Free Samples Can You Actually Get?
Here’s what’s typically available in the UK right now:
- Beauty & skincare — The most common category. Mini moisturisers, foundation samples, shampoo sachets, perfume vials.
- Baby products — Nappies, wipes, baby food pouches. If you’re expecting or have a baby under 12 months, you can save £50+ a year on samples alone.
- Pet food — Small bags of dry food, pouches of wet food, treats. Great for trying new brands before committing to a £15 bag.
- Household cleaning — Washing capsules, surface sprays, air fresheners.
- Food & drink — Tea bags, coffee samples, cereal portions, protein bars. Seasonal campaigns around new product launches are your best bet.
- Health & wellness — Vitamin samples, protein powder sachets, supplement trial packs.
How Much Can You Realistically Save?
Let’s be honest — free samples won’t replace your weekly shop. But they can make a genuine difference:
- The average beauty sample is worth £2-5, and you can easily request 3-5 per month = £6-25 in free products
- Baby samples are worth £5-15 each and come several times a year = £20-60 annually
- Pet food samples save you buying full-price products to test = £10-30 a year
- Household product samples replace occasional purchases = £5-15 a year
All in, a dedicated sampler can easily pick up £50-100 worth of free products per year. It’s not life-changing money, but it’s genuinely free stuff that you’d otherwise buy.
Current Free Samples Available Right Now
For the most up-to-date list of free samples you can request today, check our free stuff page. We verify every offer and remove expired ones daily, so you can trust that what’s listed is actually available.
The Bottom Line
Getting free samples by post in the UK is easy once you know where to look. The key steps are: sign up for newsletters, check regularly, be quick when good offers appear, and avoid anything that asks for more than your name and address. It takes about 10 minutes a week to request available samples, and over a year, you’ll receive a steady stream of genuinely useful products through your letterbox.
Happy sampling! 🎁
