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2 Current Deals

At 70+ pubs

Sign up for free to get a code. Includes Scotland if buying a main meal. Excludes Northern Ireland

Register for free online at Nicholson's to get a free drink any day of the week at one of its 70+ pubs – find your nearest. You can choose from a pint of Nicholson's Pale Ale, pint of Madri, Lucky Saint 0.5% lager, single Sipsmith Gin & Fever-Tree mixer, pint of Henry Weston's cider, or house soda (passion fruit, raspberry, lime, or elderflower).

If you're in Scotland, a main meal must be purchased in order to claim your free drink due to alcohol promotion laws. The freebie isn't available in Northern Ireland.

The normal cost of the drinks will vary by location, but when we checked a pub in central London, the alcoholic drinks were about £6.50.

You'll be able to view your free drink code in the 'Your Offers' section of the website, and you'll be able to view the expiry date – when we tested it, the expiry date was five months. Ask your server to scan the QR code, or add the code to an online order to redeem it.

Please be Drinkaware.

At 25+ locations

When you sign up to its newsletter and order a meal from the A La Carte menu

Sign up to the Browns newsletter to be emailed a code for a free 'seasonal cocktail' when you purchase a main meal from the A La Carte menu at one of its 25+ locations (find your nearest). Previous cocktails offered were a Muddle Strawberry Mojito or Virgin Yuzu & Elderflower Fizz.

You can't use this offer with any other discount, on bank holidays, Mother's Day or Father's Day.

Browns says the voucher may take up to 24 hours to arrive during busy times, and it'll be valid for about four weeks (the exact expiry date will be in your email). Please be Drinkaware.

Martin's Money Mantras

Use them

Before spending

If you answer 'NO' to any of the following questions, don't buy.

Are you

Not skint? Ask:

Will I use it?

Is it worth it?

Are you

Skint? Ask:

Do I need it?

Can I afford it?

Free protection for all shopping!

There's a little-known piece of legislation that turns any credit card into a financial self-defence superhero. 'Section 75' of the Consumer Credit Act means your plastic must protect anything you buy for more than £100 for free, so if there's a problem or the company goes bust, you can still get your money back.
And although Section 75 doesn't apply to debit cards, there is something else to fall back on if you've paid using a debit card, or used a credit card for a purchase under £100. Known as Chargeback, this is part of banks' and card companies' internal rules and not a legal requirement. Read full details of Section 75 or Chargeback, plus how to claim, in our guides.
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