Woolworths booster: Customer shares how she scored a shopping haul for FREE
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Woolworths customer shares how she scored a FREE shopping trip – and how you can too
- A Woolworths customer has scored a huge amount of products ‘free’
- Linda only buys special products and uses the ‘booster’ function in the app
- ‘Boosting’ on products allows customers to collect reward points faster
- This helped her get even more discounts and score the purchases ‘free’
- On this occasion she got her hands on several bathroom products
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A Woolworths customer has revealed how she managed to score a load of household items for ‘free’.
Linda shared images with a popular Facebook group, saying she only buys products at half price and uses the ‘booster’ feature in the Woolworths Rewards app.
‘All free! So I only buy items at half price and always boost my purchases when they appear in my app,” she wrote.
“In one month I got $50 in rewards and figured out the best value to get all the half price items I wanted. So these were all half the price and came out for free.’
Woolworths shopper Linda said she only buys products at half price and uses the ‘booster’ feature in the Woolworths Rewards app. Woolworths ‘boosters’ gives customers the opportunity to collect more loyalty points for every dollar spent in the store
By shopping for in-store discounts and ‘boosting’ products to receive more points using the app, Linda managed to score even more discounts and essentially got all products ‘free’
Woolworths ‘boosters’ gives customers the opportunity to collect more loyalty points for every dollar spent in the store.
By shopping for discounts and ‘boosting’ products to receive more points using the app, Linda managed to score even more discounts and essentially got all products ‘free’.
On this occasion, the bargain hunter got his hands on a variety of bathroom products – including toilet cleaner, toothpaste, razor blades, dish soap and hand soap.
The tips come at the perfect time as inflation and the rising cost of living grip Australia.
On this occasion, the bargain hunter got his hands on a variety of bathroom products – including toilet cleaner, toothpaste, razor blades, dishwashing liquid and hand soap
The social media post was liked by nearly 900 people and many thought the shopping habits were brilliant.
“Very smart shopping, well done,” one woman wrote, another said, “This is what I’ll be doing at Christmas at the end of the year, when it’s most needed.”
A third said, “I need to shop smarter too, thanks for the tips.”
And Linda is not the only one who knows about the handy tip.
Woolies have really upped their game with their rewards. I love the boosters and I just give everything a boost to make sure I don’t miss anything,” one person wrote.
“I also got $205 off a store, chose which items I needed especially, and used the 10 percent extra rewards,” said another.
It follows after a Coles customer changed her shopping routine to get discounts at the grocery store in her location after she claimed to have bought $205.50 worth of groceries for just $3.60.
Anne, from Queensland, visited her local supermarket at 8pm on Wednesday and shared an image online of the ‘cheap’ food catch, which includes 10c wraps, chopped fruit and milk.
“Best catch in ages,” she captioned the post on social media.
The next day, after revisiting Coles, Anne announced that she would permanently change her shopping schedule to 8pm to score even more price cuts.
It follows after a Coles customer changed her shopping routine to get discounts at the grocery store in her location after she claimed to have bought $205.50 worth of groceries for just $3.60. Anne visited her local supermarket at 8pm on Wednesday and shared an image online of the ‘cheap’ food catch, which includes 10c wraps, chopped fruit and milk
The next day she came across ‘another crazy price bonanza’ with nothing more than 10c except a 10kg bag of rice and bread mix for only 50c each
On Thursday Anne came across ‘another crazy discount bonanza’ with nothing more than 10c except a 10kg bag of rice and bread mix for just 50c each.
She shared photos of the purchases, including a pair of socks and pet food for just 10 cents each.
The social media post sparked a buzz online with shoppers eager to shop later for the best discounts.
’10c for the socks! Thats crazy!’ one person wrote, another added: ‘You scored great.’