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Hush is one of those mid-tier British clothing brands that seems to show up in your wardrobe and stay there. The colours don’t shout, the fabrics tend not to shrink, and the discounts - when they come - can make that £120 denim dress feel ever so slightly like a… read more »Hush is one of those mid-tier British clothing brands that seems to show up in your wardrobe and stay there.…
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
NHS Exclusive
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
NHS Exclusive
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
You may wish to try them anyway, sometimes they can still work!
Likely expired on: 1st February
Likely expired on: 10th January
Likely expired on: 10th February
Likely expired on: 10th Nov 2025
Likely expired on: 30th May 2025
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Likely expired on: 17th Aug 2025
Hush is one of those mid-tier British clothing brands that seems to show up in your wardrobe and stay there. The colours don’t shout, the fabrics tend not to shrink, and the discounts - when they come - can make that £120 denim dress feel ever so slightly like a clever move. Especially if yuo’re quick during the seasonal clear-outs. For anyone buying twice a year with quiet efficiency (or working odd shifts where comfort counts), it can be a subtle but worthwhile habit. The recent push around takeback schemes and softer sustainable packaging is also less noise, more scaffolding. So if you're considering a wardrobe refresh and eyeing the sale rail, it helps to know exactly what still holds up - and what’s really worth entering a code for.
Hush’s partnership with Thrift+ is reasonably well integrated, provided yuo’re looking to offload your third redundant cardigan or some boots that turned out to be more ‘festival hopeful’ than ‘practical’. You can add a Thrift+ bag at checkout, send in unwanted clothes, and the items will be photographed and listed online. A percentage of the resale price can go to charity, with some donors receiving a hush voucher in return. It’s not always automatic and availability shifts - so this isn’t a transaction you can bank on, but the offer’s there, loosely framed around sustainability and second-chance ethics. Depending on what you send, you may receive a discount code for future purchases, which can be stacked with sale items when applicable.

The site still offers standard free delivery on all orders over £50, which - given the prices - tends to mean most things ship free unless yuo’ve just come for a belt. Delivery under that threshold incurs a fee (currently standard, with no standout quirks worth dissecting). Keyworker savings are listed under Hush’s info section, though not prominently pushed. If you’re NHS, Blue Light eligible or otherwise in the thick of it, it’s worth checking for periodic codes or extra markdowns linked to seasonal shifts or partner promotions.
Right now, the summer sale section is showing reductions of up to 60%. This includes the Clara Knitted Dress, previously £90, now hovering around £47 depending on the colour. Hush’s summer pieces have always leaned lightweight - often modal, cotton, or linen blends - so they straddle British summers and makeshift air-conditioning with reasonable flexibility. Dresses like the Grace Air Flow V-Neck Maxi sit closer to full RRP, currently still £110, which makes timing your buy here worth the effort. This isn't fast fashion. It lingers.

Many of the sale reductions cluster around the £50 mark - visibly curated under that filter - which syncs nicely with the free shipping threshold. The Mini Semi Precious Beaded Necklace dips to £20 from £38, while the Front Bow Linen Blend Maxi Shirt Dress has halved from £130 to £65. If yuo’re rebalancing a wardrobe that’s creaked under lockdown joggers or uniform blues, these prices are neither outrageous nor remarkable - but manageable, and better with a code.
Returns are straightforward, though not free unless the item is faulty. Exchanges aren't offered as standard; customers are advised to return and re-order. However, Hush is piloting collaborations like Reskinned - a clothing 're-homing' platform - for garments with more life to give. That sits alongside Thrift+ but isn't the same proposition. If yuo’re cleaning out a wardrobe or doing that third-quarter life rationalisation, it’s worth keeping an eye on both schemes. Some old hush pieces may fetch you a code or simply less guilt when loading up the new-season basket.

Discount codes can be entered into the usual promo field at checkout. Past sales have appeared in early April for spring lines, with Boxing Day and New Year marking bigger clearance efforts. Hush doesn’t flood inboxes with hourly drops, but signing up to the newsletter or poking around the 'Key Worker Discount' tab occasionally pays off. Codes don’t tend to auto-apply, though some promotions have built-in deductions - check the total before yuo blink and click 'Pay'.
It’s a brand that sticks to rhythm - nothing breathless, nothing particularly trend-chasing. The cuts are flattering in a low-intervention way. The colour palettes are confident without needing to be loud. And while yuo’ll find cheaper elsewhere, especially if chasing volume, the combination of low-key comfort and quiet polish has turned Hush into occasional gold for essential workers, busy parents, or anyone who's just not here for a wardrobe overhaul every two months. Use a code. Don’t overthink it.
hush offers a fairly standard range of delivery options, including next-day delivery and Click & Collect. You can’t specify an exact time slot for arrival—life remains unpredictable—but you can track your order. If the courier claims it's arrived and you’re still staring at your front door, there’s a support channel for that.
They deliver internationally, which is good news if you're abroad and feeling the pull of a British cardigan. Changing your delivery address post-purchase is not guaranteed but might be possible. Best not to test the limits of their flexibility.
Returns are accepted, including sale items, which is more generous than some. The process is mostly self-service—no printed paperwork in the parcel—so you'll need to initiate it online. You’ll also be paying to post it back, unless you're international, in which case the process is slightly more arcane.
There’s no free home collection. No label? You can request a new one. Items bought through third-party retailers need to be returned to those retailers. Fair enough.
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Looking for more ways to save? These similar retailers also offer NHS discounts and keyworker deals across a range of categories.