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1 Current Deal

Sale on now

No code needed

Website: Loveholidays
Start date: Thursday 18 December
End date: Sunday 8 February

Sale strength: Online tour operator Loveholidays has launched its winter sale, offering ‘up to £600 off’ selected deals. When we looked on Monday 29 December, we saw discounts range from £15 to £220.

According to Loveholidays, the £600 saving is based on holidays of over £2,000. The discounts are ‘based on a representative sample of holidays available at the time of advertising and are subject to availability and change,’ it says. Discounts have already been applied, so there’s no need for a code.

Here are some deals we spotted for August 2026:

You can book a holiday with a deposit starting from £19 per person, which is £6 cheaper than the deposit Jet2 has on offer in its sale. While a low deposit may sound enticing, it’s important to only book a holiday you can afford – don’t get into debt to jet abroad.

Packages with Loveholidays are ATOL protected. The tour operator also runs a ‘Best Price Promise’ too, which means if you find the same holiday at a lower price elsewhere, it says it'll refund the difference.

Any other ways to save on flights this winter? Yes, British Airways, Easyjet, Jet2, TUI and Virgin Atlantic have also kicked off their sales.

Flights and holidays are dynamically priced based on availability, which means discounts on fares and packages can fluctuate, so if there's a flight you're after, use tools such as Skyscanner and Google Flights to track prices.

See our guide on how to find cheap flights for tips.

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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