Whole Foods Market Whole Foods Market: $10.00 Off All In-Store Purchases of $50.00 or More, Amazon Prime Members Only $10 Off All In-Store Purchases of $50 or More!
get this dealBuy more organic groceries this week at Whole Foods Market, because Amazon Prime members can take $10.00 off all in-store purchases of $50.00 or more to celebrate their involvement in Prime Day!
Simply log into your Amazon account on the promotional page to get your coupon, then present it to your cashier when checking out in-store.
There are some restrictions, as there's a limit of one coupon per transaction and the discount cannot be used on gift cards, stamps and alcohol.
This offer is available for Amazon Prime members only until July 17 at all 14 Whole Foods Market locations in Canada -- click here to find the Whole Foods Market nearest you.
Not an Amazon Prime member? Sign up for a free 30-day trial to get this deal and unlock access to all Prime Day deals starting July 16!
27 Comments
View allUS promotion is spend $10 in-store, get $10 on Amazon.com vs Canada promotion as stated in OP
July 11-17
Prime members: Scan your Prime Code or use your mobile number at checkout in-store between 7/11-7/17/18 on a single purchase of $10 or more. You’ll get $10 on Amazon to spend on Prime Day. Prime Day deals start on 7/16/18 at 3 p.m. ET. Limit one per customer. Exclusions apply. Not available on Prime Now.
Upvoted
Thanks OP.
Wait, somebody down-voted this thread?
With the recent Amazon purchase their produce prices did drop across the board (still expensive) but I wouldn't mind going there once in awhile -- but definitely like you said, can't go pick things up every week.
Ron.
They're basically asking you to actually show the coupon on your account from the following link:
Http://www.amazon.ca/wfmprime
But still an awesome deal as it stacks with other promotions (10% off case discount in my case).
$2.80 after taxes per bottle of Kombucha is Hawt!
Not everybody has a data plan and a phone/browser with them at all times.
Do they hand you an iPad to login, or do they drag customers to a desktop computer in the back room and ask them to perform an Amazon login to confirm Prime membership? That sounds extreme...
Ron.