The biggest single discount on ZALORA Singapore goes to first-time shoppers: the app code 1STAPP gives 10 percent off plus 10 percent cashback on your first order, minimum spend S$69, discount capped at S$15. After that, the savings come from understanding three things rather than hunting for a magic code. First, shipping is free once your order is S$50 or more after discounts, so a small basket pays a delivery fee that a code rarely covers. Second, the stackable system lets you combine a percentage code with a fixed-amount code, then add a cashback card and ShopBack on top, because each layer applies to what you actually pay. Third, returns are free within 30 days, which changes the calculus on buying two sizes. If you shop ZALORA more than a handful of times a year, the S$14.90 ZALORA NOW membership wipes out shipping fees entirely and pays for itself in roughly four to five orders. This guide gives you the real 2026 numbers, the codes worth typing, and the maths on whether each tactic is worth it.
Coupon sites push a wall of codes because clicks pay them, not because most of those codes work. The discounts that reliably move money on ZALORA Singapore in 2026 are a short list, and they layer on top of each other.
Start with eligibility. If you have never ordered, the app-only 1STAPP code is the strongest deal you will see: 10 percent off plus 10 percent cashback on your first order, minimum spend S$69, discount capped at S$15, one use per customer. That cap matters; spending far above S$69 dilutes the percentage, so a first order around S$150 captures the full S$15 without overbuying. After your first order, the wins come from stacking a sitewide percentage code with a bank or payment-method code, clearing the S$50 free-shipping threshold, and adding cashback through ShopBack and a rewards card.
Everything below is built on one rule: judge the all-in total on the payment screen, not the headline percentage. A 25 percent code on an inflated basket can still leave you paying a delivery fee and buying things you will return. The number that counts is what leaves your account after every layer applies. A few avoided impulse buys a month are better off in a high-yield savings account than in your wardrobe.
Your first ZALORA order is worth the most, so do not spend it on a single cheap item. New-user offers beat anything regulars get, and ZALORA ties them to your account and payment method, so you get one shot.
The headline new-user code is 1STAPP: 10 percent off plus 10 percent cashback, minimum spend S$69, discount capped at S$15, redeemable only in the ZALORA app on selected items. The 10 percent cashback lands in your ZALORA Wallet for a future order, so the real value is split between this purchase and the next. Some new accounts also see a separate welcome code (often quoted as 10 percent off a first web order) and a S$20 newsletter voucher for signing up by email. These rotate, so confirm the live offer in the app before you build your cart.
Because the discount caps at S$15, the efficient first order sits between S$69 and roughly S$150. Below S$69 you do not qualify; far above S$150 you are buying more to chase a fixed S$15, which is the wrong way round. One offer per account, tied to your phone number and card, so throwaway accounts usually fail at checkout. Spend the first order on something you would buy anyway, then move to the stacking strategy below.
Unlike many retailers, ZALORA Singapore lets you stack vouchers in one order. This is where most shoppers leave money behind, because they type one code and stop.
At checkout you will see a voucher list. When a code is marked 'stackable voucher, can select multiple', you can tick more than one. The most efficient pairing is a percentage code with a fixed-amount code: apply the percentage first to shrink the basket, then the fixed dollar amount comes off the reduced total. Codes for the same item or SKU usually cannot combine with an existing cart promotion (for example, a 'buy two, get 25 percent off' deal blocks a further code on those items). Gift cards and certain seller-specific codes are also excluded.
Layer the payment method on top. Bank and wallet codes are co-funded by the partner, so they tend to apply cleanly: as of mid-2026, DBS, UOB, OCBC and American Express cardholders have had 15 percent-off ZALORA codes, and SAFRA members get 12 percent off a minimum spend of S$150 (code SAFRAZAL26, capped at S$50, valid to 31 December 2026). Grab and PayLater promotions appear periodically too. Pick the payment method whose code is live, then stack it under your sitewide voucher.
A promo code that saves you a few dollars is wasted if you then pay a delivery fee you could have avoided. ZALORA Singapore waives shipping once your net order value is S$50 or more, calculated after discounts and vouchers are applied, and counted per individual seller on the marketplace.
That after-discount detail catches people out. If your cart is S$55 and a code knocks it to S$48, you can drop below the free-shipping line and get charged delivery, wiping out part of the saving. Check the order summary before you confirm; if you are close, adding a low-cost item to clear S$50 net can be cheaper than paying the fee. The per-seller rule also matters: a marketplace order split across two sellers may each need to hit the threshold separately.
There is a returns wrinkle worth knowing. If you qualified for free shipping by clearing S$50, then return enough that the kept items fall below S$50, ZALORA can reapply the shipping fee that was originally waived. Returns themselves are free, but a partial return that drops you under the threshold can claw back the delivery waiver, so factor that in before you buy three items planning to keep one.
If you order from ZALORA more than a few times a year, the membership usually beats chasing shipping thresholds on every order. ZALORA NOW costs S$14.90 for one year and removes shipping fees with no minimum spend, plus unlimited express delivery: order before 7pm and eligible items arrive the next working day between 9am and 10pm.
The break-even depends on what you would otherwise pay in delivery. Standard shipping on a sub-S$50 order is a few dollars, so on small orders ZALORA NOW pays for itself in roughly four to five orders across the year, and removes the pressure to pad baskets just to clear S$50. If you only ever buy large orders that already clear the free-shipping threshold, the membership saves you nothing on delivery and the express speed is the only benefit; in that case, skip it.
Treat it like any subscription. Buy it only if you can name four or more orders you expect over the next twelve months, and let it lapse rather than auto-extend if your shopping slows. A membership you forget about is exactly the kind of small recurring charge that quietly drains a budget. The personal budget calculator is a quick way to see whether your real shopping frequency justifies it.
Before you decide between paying per order, upgrading to express or buying the membership, it helps to see the three delivery routes on one screen. The figures below reflect what current Singapore shopping guides list for ZALORA standard and express delivery; ZALORA rotates fees and occasionally runs promotional free-shipping events, so the order summary at checkout is the number that binds, not any guide.
Read it against your own pattern. If most of your baskets already clear S$50 net, standard shipping is free and you are paying for nothing by upgrading. If you place small orders often and hate waiting, the membership removes both the fee and the threshold pressure. If you rarely shop but need one item fast, a single express order beats a year-long membership you would not use again.
Coupon roundups love long tables of bank codes with exact strings like a card brand plus the year. The honest problem is that those codes expire and rotate every cycle, so a code that worked last quarter often fails at checkout now. Rather than reprint strings we cannot stand behind, here is the shape of what tends to be available, so you know which partner to check before you buy. Treat any specific string as a starting point and confirm it is live in the ZALORA app or on the partner's own page.
The one code in this list we can confirm against its source is the SAFRA member offer. SAFRA publishes SAFRAZAL26 for 12 percent off a minimum spend of S$150, capped at S$50, valid from 20 January 2025 to 31 December 2026, for SAFRA members and national servicemen. For bank and wallet codes, the discount is co-funded by the partner, which is exactly why they apply cleanly on top of a sitewide voucher.
A code cuts the bill once. Cashback pays you back on every order, on top of the code, because it is calculated on what you actually pay after discounts. This is the layer most shoppers ignore.
Start the order from ShopBack. As of mid-2026, ShopBack pays 9 percent cashback on ZALORA (10 percent for ShopBack Plus members), capped at S$20 per ZALORA user per order per month, tracked within 7 days and confirmed in about 95 days. At a 9 percent rate that S$20 cap is reached at roughly S$222 of net spend, so on a large order the dollars stop climbing past that point. Empty your cart before clicking through from ShopBack so the tracking attaches to your purchase. Then pay with a rewards card. A card that rewards online retail spend earns miles or cashback on the discounted total, and it stacks with both the ZALORA code and the ShopBack rate, since each is funded by a different party.
Watch the conditions on every layer: ShopBack's monthly cap, your card's minimum spend and merchant-category exclusions, and the ZALORA voucher T&Cs. ZALORA falls under the retail merchant category, so a card that excludes or earns nothing on online retail spend will pay you nothing here regardless of the headline rate; our guide to merchant category codes explains how that classification decides your rewards. Rates change, so confirm before you assume the headline. The principle is stable though: a sitewide code, a payment-method code, ShopBack and the right cashback or miles card together can take 20 percent or more off a ZALORA order that a single coupon alone would barely dent.
Applying a code is the easy part. On the app, add items to your bag, open the bag, and tap the voucher or promo field; on the web, the box sits on the order summary at checkout. Enter the code, apply it, and watch the order total update before you pay. If a code is stackable the checkout says so and lets you tick a second one. If nothing changes, the code has not applied, and you should not pay assuming it will sort itself out later.
Most codes copied from coupon aggregators fail for boring reasons, not because they are scams. The usual culprits: the code expired, you missed the minimum spend, your basket holds excluded brands or sale items, you are not in the eligible group (new user, specific bank, SAFRA member), or you already used a one-per-account offer. Marketplace items sold by third parties are often carved out of sitewide vouchers too. None of that is visible on a coupon site, which is why a long list of codes feels generous and delivers almost nothing.
Skip the aggregators and go to the source. The live, working codes sit on ZALORA's own promotions page and inside the app, and partner codes sit on the bank, wallet or SAFRA page that funds them. That is also where the real terms live: the cap, the minimum spend and the expiry that decide whether a code does anything for your specific cart.
The deepest cuts on ZALORA come from event sales, not everyday codes, and you can stack a voucher on top of an already-reduced item. Knowing the calendar saves more than any single coupon.
The recurring monthly events are the double-date sales, such as the 6.6 and 12.12, plus Black Friday and the ZALORA Big Fashion Sale, which has advertised up to 90 percent off on clearance lines. The 6.6 sale in 2026 ran 5 to 10 June with up to 60 percent off across brands like H&M, NEXT, Calvin Klein, Nike, PUMA and ALDO. There is also a Birthday Sale and an outlet section with permanent markdowns of up to 80 percent that needs no code.
The old Great Singapore Sale is now decentralised; since 2024 the Singapore Retailers Association no longer runs unified national dates, so retailers including ZALORA schedule their own GSS-branded promotions in a broad late-May-to-July window. The practical move is to add wishlist items to your cart, wait for the next double-date or seasonal sale, then stack a sitewide code and ShopBack on the reduced price. If an item is not on your list of things you actually need, a sale is not a reason to buy it; that is how a discount becomes an expense.
Returns shape how you should buy clothes online, because sizing is the main reason a code-driven bargain turns into wasted money. ZALORA Singapore gives 30 days of free returns from delivery, so buying two sizes to keep the better fit costs nothing extra in shipping.
Items must come back unused and in original condition with tags attached and in their original packaging. Some categories are not returnable at all on hygiene grounds, including underwear, lingerie sets, socks, hosiery, earrings, headphones and beauty products; swimwear is only returnable with its hygiene sticker intact, and beauty items are accepted only if unopened and unused. Because the list is non-exhaustive and changes over time, check the return eligibility shown on each product page before you buy. Once the warehouse receives your return, the refund follows your payment provider's own lead time, and refunds can also be issued to your ZALORA Wallet, which is faster if you plan to reorder.
The catch links back to free shipping. If your order qualified for free delivery at S$50 net and your kept items fall below S$50 after the return, the original shipping fee can be reapplied. So if you buy three items intending to keep one and that one is under S$50, you may end up paying delivery after all. Where sizing is uncertain, it is still cheaper to over-order and return than to guess wrong and reorder, but keep the threshold in mind.
For new users, the app-only 1STAPP gives 10 percent off plus 10 percent cashback on your first order, minimum spend S$69, capped at S$15, one use per customer. For existing customers, payment-method codes are the most reliable because the partner co-funds them: DBS, UOB, OCBC and American Express cardholders have had 15 percent-off codes, and SAFRA members get 12 percent off a minimum spend of S$150 (SAFRAZAL26, cap S$50, valid to 31 December 2026). Codes rotate, so confirm the live offer in the ZALORA app or on the official promotions page before relying on it, and only count the discount once it shows on the payment screen.
Yes. ZALORA Singapore allows stackable vouchers in one order when the checkout marks a code 'stackable voucher, can select multiple'. The most efficient pairing is a percentage code plus a fixed-amount code, applied in that order so the dollar amount comes off the reduced total. You can usually add a payment-method code (bank, SAFRA, Grab) on top because it is funded separately. Same-item cart promotions, such as a 'buy two, get 25 percent off' deal, block extra codes on those items, and gift cards are excluded.
Free shipping applies once your net order value is S$50 or more, calculated after discounts and vouchers, and counted per individual seller on the marketplace. Because it is the after-discount total that counts, a code that pushes your cart below S$50 can trigger a delivery fee. If you are close, adding a low-cost item to clear S$50 net is often cheaper than paying shipping. Note that a partial return dropping your kept items below S$50 can reapply the originally waived fee.
ZALORA NOW costs S$14.90 for one year and removes shipping fees with no minimum spend, plus unlimited next-working-day express delivery for orders placed before 7pm. Against standard shipping on small orders, it pays for itself in roughly four to five orders across the year and removes the need to pad baskets to clear the S$50 free-shipping threshold. It is not worth it if you only ever place large orders that already ship free, since the express speed would be the only benefit. Buy it only if you can name four or more orders you expect in the next twelve months.
As of mid-2026, ShopBack pays 9 percent cashback on ZALORA (10 percent for ShopBack Plus), capped at S$20 per ZALORA user per order per month, tracked within 7 days and confirmed in about 95 days. At 9 percent the S$20 cap is reached at roughly S$222 of net spend, so the cashback dollars stop climbing past that. Empty your cart before clicking through from ShopBack so the purchase tracks. On top of that, paying with a card that rewards online retail spend earns miles or cashback on the discounted total. Because each layer is funded separately, ShopBack, a ZALORA code and your card all stack on the same order.
ZALORA Singapore offers 30 days of free returns from the delivery date. Items must be unused and in original condition with tags attached and in their original packaging. Some categories are non-returnable on hygiene grounds, including underwear, lingerie, socks, earrings, headphones and beauty products; swimwear is only returnable with its hygiene sticker, and beauty items only if unopened and unused. The list is non-exhaustive, so check the eligibility shown on each product page. After the warehouse receives your return, the refund follows your payment provider's lead time, or lands faster in your ZALORA Wallet. One catch: if your order qualified for free shipping at S$50 net and your kept items fall below S$50 after the return, the original shipping fee can be reapplied.
The deepest cuts come from double-date sales like 6.6 and 12.12, plus Black Friday and the ZALORA Big Fashion Sale, which has advertised up to 90 percent off on clearance. The 6.6 sale in 2026 ran 5 to 10 June with up to 60 percent off across brands like H&M, Nike and Calvin Klein. There is also a Birthday Sale and an outlet section with standing markdowns up to 80 percent that needs no code. Since the Great Singapore Sale decentralised in 2024, ZALORA runs its own GSS-branded promotions in a broad late-May-to-July window. You can stack a voucher and ShopBack on already-reduced sale prices.
No. New-user offers like 1STAPP are one per account, tied to your phone number and payment method, so creating fresh accounts to re-trigger the discount usually fails at checkout. Because it is a one-time discount capped at S$15, spend it on a first order between S$69 and about S$150, where you capture the full cap without overbuying, then move to the stacking strategy of a sitewide code plus a payment-method code, ShopBack, and a cashback card for future orders.
On the ZALORA app, add your items, open the bag, and tap the voucher or promo field, then enter and apply the code. On the website, the promo box sits on the order summary at checkout. Either way, confirm the order total drops before you pay. If the code is stackable the checkout flags it and lets you add a second voucher. Apply a percentage code first and the fixed-dollar code second so the cash amount comes off the already-reduced total.
Almost always for an ordinary reason rather than a scam. The code may have expired, your basket may be under the minimum spend, it may contain excluded brands, sale items or third-party marketplace listings, or you may not be in the eligible group such as new user, a specific bank's cardholder or a SAFRA member. One-per-account offers also will not re-trigger on the same phone number or card. Codes copied from coupon aggregator sites fail most often because none of those terms are shown there. Get codes from ZALORA's own promotions page and the app, or from the bank or wallet page that funds the code.
Current Singapore shopping guides list standard delivery at about S$4.90 per order, free once your net order is S$50 or more per seller, and express delivery at about S$8.90 per order for next-working-day arrival when ordered before 7pm. ZALORA NOW membership at S$14.90 a year removes shipping fees on all orders with no minimum spend and includes unlimited express delivery. Fees rotate and promotional free-shipping events run from time to time, so treat the figure in your checkout order summary as the one that counts.
This is general financial information for Singapore, not personal financial advice. Figures change — verify current rates against the official sources above before acting. See our full disclaimer.