Amazon will hold a one-day discounting extravaganza on Wednesday 15 July and is promising more deals than Black Friday.
While prices have not yet been disclosed, some of the items that will be discounted include the Garmin Forerunner 210 GPS Sportswatch, a boxset of all the Game of Thrones books and a Philips 50-Inch Widescreen 1080p Full HD Smart LED TV.
How to shop Amazon Prime Day for free
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Amazon will hold a one-day discounting extravaganza on Wednesday 15 July and is promising more deals than Black Friday. While prices have not yet been disclosed, some of the items that will be discounted include the Garmin Forerunner 210 GPS Sportswatch, a boxset of all the Game of Thrones books and a Philips 50-Inch Widescreen 1080p Full HD Smart LED TV. Exclusive The internet giant's 'Prime Day' is happening across the world and is exclusively for Amazon Prime members. The paid-for Prime service gives customers access to unlimited one-day delivery with no minimum order value, secure unlimited photo storage, Kindle Books they can borrow for free and unlimited instant movie and TV streaming. It costs £79 a year. However, non-Prime customers can shop Wednesday's sale by signing up for a free 30-day of Amazon Prime (which requires payment details to be submitted). They will be able to enjoy the discounts and benefits outlined above but if they fail to cancel the free trial by the end of the 30-day period they will be charged the annual fee. To cancel, free trial users will need to sign in to their account and select 'Do not upgrade' in the 'Your Account' section. It's also possible to shop Amazon Prime Day without signing up for the free trial either – as long as you live with an existing Prime customer or free-trial user. They are allowed to invite up to four guests living at the same address. Anyone signed up to Amazon Family or Amazon Student can also shop the Prime Day sale but Monthly Prime Instant Video members cannot. Amazon introduced Prime in 2013 when it cost £49 a year and replaced free delivery on all orders. In March 2015, the Advertising Standards Authority ordered Amazon to pull a misleading Prime advert that did not make it clear enough that customers signing up to free trial offer would be charged at the end of the trial period if they failed to cancel.
Source Moneywise http://ift.tt/1Rwb7xY
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