Discount apps in Czechia fall into three groups: leaflet aggregators led by Kupi.cz, retail chain loyalty apps — Lidl Plus, Kaufland Card, Tesco Clubcard — and cashback services Tipli and Plná peněženka. All of them are free, registration takes a couple of minutes, and Kupi.cz itself estimates average savings on promotional purchases at around 30%.
The landscape has shifted noticeably in recent times: Too Good To Go wound down its operations in Czechia, leaving the Czech app Nesnězeno (part of the international platform Munch) as the leading food-rescue tool. And in summer 2026, Globus started sending its promotional flyers straight to WhatsApp. Here's the full rundown of tools currently worth having — from groceries to clothing.
Promotional leaflets (letáky) are the backbone of saving money in Czechia: chains cut prices on hundreds of items every week, and the difference from the regular price often reaches 30–50%. No need to flip through paper booklets — it's all collected in aggregator apps.
A useful trick: before a big shop, enter 5–7 staple items into Kupi.cz and see which chain gives you the cheapest basket overall. For where it generally pays to shop, see our guide to where groceries are cheaper in Czechia, and for the broader cost picture, our piece on the cost of living in Prague.
Nearly every Czech chain has switched to dual pricing: a regular price and a "with card" price. Without the loyalty app, you're systematically overpaying, so it's worth installing the apps of any chains you visit at least once a month.
At dm, the active beauty programme runs through the Moje dm app: 1 point for every 25 Kč spent, 200 points earn a 50 Kč discount, plus e-coupons for bonus points. Rossmann Club offers a welcome 10% coupon on your first order, club prices, and a 10% discount in your birthday month; Teta has its own club too. For a detailed comparison, see our guide to drugstores dm, Rossmann and Teta.
Cashback portals refund part of your spend on online purchases. The mechanics are simple: you go to the online shop through a link from the service or its browser extension, pay for your order as usual, and a few weeks later a percentage of the amount lands in your account with the service.
Cashback typically runs 1–10% depending on the shop, and exact rates and bonuses change — check within the services themselves before buying. Install the browser extension, and it will remind you whenever a given e-shop offers cashback. If you order groceries online, it's worth checking the cashback services too — we've covered how Rohlík and Košík work in a separate guide.
Czech banks run their own cashback programmes too. Air Bank calls its version "Odměny za placení": you activate partner offers in the app, pay by card, and the bank refunds a portion of the amount — monthly totals are added up and paid into your account by the 10th of the following month. ČSOB and other banks periodically launch card-payment cashback promotions; check current terms in the benefits section of your mobile banking app. It's wise not to spend the refunded crowns straight away, but to set them aside — for example, in a savings account that earns interest.
The landscape here has changed: Too Good To Go announced its exit from Czechia and wound down operations within roughly three months of the announcement. The main remaining alternative is the Czech app Nesnězeno (operating as "Nesnězeno by Munch," part of the international Munch platform): it's the largest local food-rescue service, with over 1,500 partner restaurants, bakeries, and shops across the country.
The mechanics are the same: venues list bags of unsold food at a reduced price — usually about half price or better — you pay for the bag in the app and pick it up within a specified time window. Evening markdowns at supermarkets round out the picture: discount stickers on items nearing their expiry date tend to appear closer to closing time.
| Tool | What it offers | Who needs it most |
|---|---|---|
| Kupi.cz | All leaflets, price comparison, deal watcher | Everyone — the basic app |
| Lidl Plus, Kaufland Card, Clubcard | Club prices and checkout coupons | Those who shop offline |
| Tipli, Plná peněženka | 1–10% back on online purchases | Those who order from e-shops |
| Bank cashback rewards | Cashback on card payments | Air Bank, ČSOB and similar customers |
| Nesnězeno (Munch) | Food bags at around 50% off | Residents of major cities |
| Vinted, outlets, secondhand shops | Clothing 30–70% cheaper | Families with children, and others |
Discounts are only part of the savings picture — don't forget to check whether you're eligible for a tax refund. Vetted accountants from our directory can help you work it out.
Start with Kupi.cz — it covers shopping planning and price comparison — plus the loyalty apps of two or three chains you actually visit. That's enough to save on every receipt without much extra effort.
No, all the apps and services listed — Kupi.cz, chain loyalty programmes, Tipli, Plná peněženka, Nesnězeno, Vinted — are free for users. These services earn from stores and partners, not from you, so feel free to install several at once.
The exact figure depends on how many tools you use. On promotional groceries alone, Kupi.cz claims average savings of around 30% per purchase; cashback services add another 1–10% on online orders; and food from Nesnězeno or outlet clothing can be discounted by 50–70%. Add it all up over a month, and it's a meaningful dent in the household budget.
You can register with any email address, but Tipli and Plná peněženka pay accumulated cashback out to a bank account, so a local account is by far the most convenient. For how to open one, see our guide on opening an account at a Czech bank.
The Nesnězeno app (operating under the brand "Nesnězeno by Munch," part of the international Munch platform) is the largest Czech food-rescue service, with over 1,500 partner venues. The principle is the same: a surprise bag at a discount, paid for in the app, picked up within a set time window.
Usually an email and any number for verification will do, but some chains send SMS codes only to Czech numbers. A cheap local plan solves the problem — see our overview of mobile operators in Czechia.
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