Get Up to $40 Free Amazon Credit for Prime Day
Amazon is offering several ways for Amazon shoppers to get free credit to use on Prime Day 2020. You must do these by October 12 and the credit is only good on October 13-14. As an Amazon affiliate I earn from qualifying purchases at no cost to you. Affiliate links used in this post.
You must be a Prime member to get these deals, so if you aren’t, first sign up for the free 30-day trial.
Here are the offers:
Spend $10 with an Amazon Small Business, get $10 to spend on Prime Day.
Spend $10 with Whole Foods (online or in-store), get $10 to spend on Prime Day.
Spend $10 at Amazon Books or Amazon Pop-Up, get $10 to spend on Prime Day.
Spend $10 at Amazon 4-Star, get $10 to spend on Prime Day.
For each offer, after you purchase/receive the item, you will get an email with the $10 credit. You must open the email, click the button to “claim” the $10 and apply the credit to your account. Don’t just expect it to magically show up!
From Amazon:
The $10 credit is valid from 12:00 am (PST) October 13, to 11:01 pm (PST) October 15, 2020.
Prime Day Deals start October 13, 2020. The credit won’t be applied to purchases on Amazon prior to 12:00 am (PST) October 13.
What is it the Amazon credit good for?
The $10 account credit is good for purchases on Amazon or the Amazon shopping app on products sold by Amazon.com (look for “sold by Amazon.com” on product detail page). Products sold by third-party sellers or other Amazon entities will not qualify for this offer, even if “fulfilled by Amazon.com” or “Prime Eligible”. It does not apply to gift cards, alcohol, subscriptions, tax, shipping costs or Prime Now orders.
How do I redeem my credit on Amazon?
Once you have claimed the credit through your Whole Foods Market or Amazon shopping apps, the $10 credit will be automatically applied when you add qualifying items to your cart and complete the purchase during Prime Day October 13 – October 15, 2020, 11:01 pm (PST). In your Order Summary at checkout, you’ll see the discount under the label “Whole Foods Credit”.