Marks & Spencer offers free Clinique gift set worth £79 with purchase
Marks & Spencer shoppers could unlock a free five-piece Clinique set worth £79 by buying two products, with one skincare or foundation item.
Marks & Spencer gave beauty shoppers a neat piece of deal math: buy two Clinique products, make sure one is skincare or foundation, and walk away with a five-piece gift set worth £79 at no extra charge. The promotion ran until June 3, 2026, while stocks lasted, and it turned a routine restock into a polished self-care buy rather than a full-price gift-box splurge.
The set was built around five travel-friendly Clinique favourites: All About Clean Liquid Facial Soap Mild, 30ml, Moisture Surge 100-Hour Auto-Replenishing Hydrator, 15ml, Moisture Surge Overnight Mask, 30ml, Clinique Pop Longwear Lipstick in Plum Pop, and High Impact Mascara in Black. That mix made the offer feel smarter than a throwaway sample pack. It covered cleanse, hydrate, lip colour and mascara, which is exactly the kind of compact bundle that works for a weekend away, a work bag or a summer beauty refresh.
M&S described the offer as a limited edition gift with purchase and marked it as just arrived at £79 on its product page, underlining how retailer-led gifting has become part of the beauty shop experience. The Clinique at M&S page also showed the scale of the brand’s presence there, with 229 Clinique items across makeup, skincare, bath and body, men’s grooming and fragrance. That breadth matters because it lets the free set function as an incentive attached to products many shoppers were likely to buy anyway.

Clinique’s own UK site was running its own gift-with-purchase programme at the same time, with online offers tied to £55 and £70 spends. Clinique has long leaned on those promotional bundles, and its gifts and sets are positioned as allergy tested, fragrance free and dermatologist guided. That makes the M&S version especially appealing for shoppers who want a recognisable beauty present without paying separate beauty-box prices.
In practice, this was less about indulgence for indulgence’s sake and more about strategic value: a gift that looked premium, travelled well and arrived attached to a shopping basket that already had a purpose. For anyone buying Clinique anyway, the free £79 set was one of those rare beauty offers that felt generous, useful and easy to justify in the same transaction.
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