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Cote Brasserie deals

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Expired

Côte ‎Brasserie ‎kids eat for £1

Via app and when an adult buys a main meal

From Monday 16 February, if you dine in at a Côte ‎Brasserie restaurant (find your nearest), kids aged 12 and under can eat for £1 if you're signed up to its app (available for free on Apple and Android) and purchase a full-price adult main meal.

The offer is available every day until Friday 20 February from restaurant opening time until closing.

You'll be able to get either a kid’s breakfast with every adult hot breakfast purchased, or a two-course kids' meal with every full-price adult main meal. A kids' main meal alone would usually cost up to £7.50.

You can't use this offer alongside other promotions, and you can only redeem this via the app.

Fancy eating somewhere out? See our Restaurant deals page for the latest offers.

Expired

Cote Brasserie two courses for £15 or three for £19

Available via its app. Weekdays only

Visit a Cote Brasserie restaurant and you can get a two-course set menu for £15 or three courses for £19 on any weekday until Friday 30 January.

All you need to do is book a table, download the free Cote Brasserie app (Android / iOS) and show your 'Loyalty Pass' when paying.

Set menu prices are typically about £23 for two courses and £27 for three courses, depending on the location (find your nearest), so a decent saving is on offer here.

Check our Restaurant deals page for more of the latest offers.

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If you answer 'NO' to any of the following questions, don't buy.

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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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