
Primark restocks sold-out Olaplex dupes & the whole range is £166.50 cheaper than the posh brand
And these are not the only dupes to look for next time you're visiting the retailer
DUPE ALERT Primark restocks sold-out Olaplex dupes & the whole range is £166.50 cheaper than the posh brand
IT'S the viral collection that took the internet by storm - and now Primark has restocked sold-out Olaplex dupes again.
The budget retailer began producing dupes of the luxury haircare range in 2023, but bargain-mad Brits have struggled to get their hands on the sell-out range.
Advertisement
3
Primark has sent fans wild after restocking the viral sold-out Olaplex dupes
Credit: Getty Images - Getty
3
The whole range will save you more than a whopping £166
Credit: TikTok/@famirxx
3
Beauty buffs can now get cut-price versions of Olaplex for as little as £4.50
Credit: supplied
Luckily, if you're on a mission to give your hair some much-needed TLC, we can reveal that the dupes have been restocked in Primark's across the country.
Not only that, but the whole range is £166.50 cheaper than the posh brand.
The PS... Pro Bond Pro-Repair Styling Hair Oil costs just £4.50 - compared to the eye-watering £28 price tag of Olaplex Bonding Oil.
Aiming to build the hair bonds for a reparative effect that leaves tresses looking and feeling thick, hydrated and healthy, this solution is the perfect final step in your budget-friendly routine.
Advertisement
It's expertly blended to help leave hair smooth and conditioned while repairing the structure of strands over time - it really doesn't get much better than this.
There are also plenty of other cult favourites to hunt for, including PS... Pro Bond Repair Shampoo and PS... Pro Bond Repair Conditioner, both of which are £5 each.
The full dupe set also includes the PS... Pro Bond Repair Intensive Hair Mask - which is thought to be a wallet-friendly alternative for No. 8 Bond Intense Moisture Mask, priced at a whopping £28.
There's also a new PS... Pro Pre-Wash Hair Treatment for a cheap £4.50.
Advertisement
This clarifying pre-wash hair treatment is designed to brighten and enhance tresses.
Primark bosses said: ''Formulated as a pre-shampoo treatment, this product aims to smooth and condition hair, while helping to build the bonds between cuticles for stronger, healthier looking hair.
I found the best summer body glow in Primark - it's only £3.50 & isn't oily
''Apply this treatment and let it sit before rinsing out and following up with your shampoo.''
If this wasn't enough to convince you to plan a trip to Primark this weekend, then their latest NUXE copycats sure will.
Advertisement
NUXE is a French skincare brand famed for its natural and sensorial products - and is particularly well known for its iconic body oils.
In true Primark fashion, the retail giant has now duped these cult-loved products.
Top Primark summer buys
IF you're looking for more Primark summer buys, then you've come to the right place.
Shoppers have recently been raving about the new Miffy PJs from Primark.
Others were desperate to nab the new leopard print nightwear.
If animal print is your thing, you'll want to check out the new maxi skirts.
The haltnerneck tops are perfect for summer.
If you're on a budget, these trousers are identical to a pair from Zara, but without the hefty price tag.
There's brilliant travel essentials for less than £10.
And if you plan on heading to the beach, you won't want to miss these crochet bags.
In stores now, you can nab the £3.50 PS... Elixir Body Oil, which nourishes and restores moisture after cleansing skin, with jojoba oil and vitamin E.
It is a dupe for the £33 Nuxe Huile Prodigieuse Multi-Purpose Dry Oil Spray.
Advertisement
There's also the £3.50 PS... Hydrating Honey Body Mist, which contains glycerine and vitamin E.
It has a shimmery formula and is a dupe for the NUXE Huile Prodigieuse Shimmering Multi Purpose Dry Oil, which also costs £33 for a 100ml bottle.
Like its dupes, the NUXE body oils are specially formulated with vitamin E, but also has a cocktail of seven precious plant oils - tsubaki, camellia, hazelnut, boarge, St Johnswort, sweet almond and macadamia.
Primark has released the spray body oil dupes as part of its new Hey Hunny range.
Advertisement
Also in the new offering is a body balm for £3.50, which can be used to 'nourish and glow' skin on both the face and limbs.
This is a dupe for the £25 NUXE Rêve de Miel Melting Honey Body Oil Balm.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Poorest Brits to benefit most from major spending changes - but tax rises loom
The poorest Brits will benefit most from Rachel Reeves's public sector spending spree but tax rises look likely in the autumn, think tank the Resolution Foundation has said The poorest Brits will benefit most from Rachel Reeves's public sector spending spree but tax rises look likely in the autumn, a leading think tank has said. The Resolution Foundation said extra funding for hospitals, schools and police would be worth around £1,700 in provision for the worst-off fifth of families by 2028/29. It estimated that a middle-income household will gain £1,400 on average. But it warned that tight public finances and a weaker economic outlook could push the Chancellor into hiking taxes. In its Spending Review analysis, the thinktank said Britain is turning into a 'National Health State' - and health could account for half (49%) of all day-to-day public service spending controlled by Westminster by the end of the decade. This is up from a third (34%) in 2009/10. READ MORE: Rachel Reeves pumps cash into NHS with 4million more tests and procedures to cut waits While funding per person for health has increased by 36% over the decade, it has fallen by 16% for justice, 31% for the DWP, and 50% for Housing, Communities and Local Government. On Wednesday the Chancellor turned on the spending taps with a £300billion package to renew Britain. It included £39billion for affordable housing and £29billion for the NHS. Ms Reeves refused to rule out future tax hikes but said all the cash doled out in her Spending Review had been accounted for already in the Budget and Spring Statement. 'It would be very risky for a Chancellor to try and write future budgets in a world as uncertain as ours, but I won't have to repeat a Budget like the one I did last year,' she told LBC. It comes as the Institute for Fiscal Studies said a "big chunk" of funding for local authorities in the Spending Review was coming from an assumption that council tax in England will rise by the maximum amount of just under 5% each year. Ms Reeves declined to rule out council tax rising by 5% every year. But she said local authorities did not have to increase tax by this figure. She also did not accept claims a 5% rise would be needed to boost police funding, saying the Government had increased the spending power of the police by 2.3% every year. READ MORE: Elsewhere, the Chancellor was also forced to reject the suggestion she was a "Klarna Chancellor" who had announced a "buy now, pay later" spending review. "I don't accept that at all," she said. "The idea that yesterday I racked up a bill that I'm going to need to pay for in the future, that's just not right. Her comments come as the Office for National Statistics reported the economy shrank by 0.3% in April. It was the biggest monthly contraction since October 2023 and worse than the 0.1% fall most economists had expected. Ruth Curtice, chief executive of the Resolution Foundation, said without economic growth, another round of tax rises was likely to come in the autumn as the Chancellor seeks to balance the books. She said: "The extra money in this spending review has already been accounted for in the last forecast. But a weaker economic outlook and the unfunded changes to winter fuel payments mean the Chancellor will likely need to look again at tax rises in the autumn." Meanwhile, Kemi Badenoch yesterday criticised the Government for giving 'more and more money' to public services - but declined to say what she would do differently. "What we should be talking about is reform of public services. They're just giving more and more money,' she said. "This is a war on the private sector, where private businesses are having to cut their coat according to their cloth. Of course, we want to fund public services, but we need to make sure that we're doing things better." But asked repeatedly to set out what the Government should stop doing, or whether she would reverse last year's rise in national insurance, Mrs Badenoch declined to answer. She said: "There's no election today. What I'm not doing is setting out a manifesto for four years' time." The Conservative leader also described rising health spending as a "conundrum", with a similar approach having been taken "again and again". In reference to a pro-Brexit campaign stunt, Mrs Badenoch said: "I mean, who remembers the side of a red bus that said 'we're going to give the NHS £350 million more a week'? "Many people don't know that we did that. We did do that, and yet, still we're not seeing the returns. We've put more and more money in, and we're getting less and less out."


Daily Record
an hour ago
- Daily Record
Millions of Brits get free mobile upgrade as two major firms confirm change
Two popular networks are joining forces which could spell good news for millions of customers across the UK Changes to your mobile phone can seem like a daunting prospect. Brits might find it all too easy to get lost in the tech jargon, as word comes from your smartphone company that they are modifying an aspect of your device. However, millions of Vodafone and Three customers are set for one kind of boost that should be very welcome - an improvement in their mobile signal, as the networks, which have recently merged, unveils its £11billion grand plans. The firms are joining forces to create a platform called VodafoneThree, meaning it will now be the UK's biggest. In just two weeks' time, seven million Three users and its budget sub-brand SMARTY will see their services get better. This includes a 20 per cent average speed uplift on 4G for everything from surfing the web to texting pals. And that's not all. Wait just a few more months, and 27 mobile subscribers across both Vodafone and Three will start to benefit from full access to roam on each other's networks. This will be made available at no extra cost. This will get rid of dreaded "not spots" from parts of the country amounting to ten times the size of London. VodafoneThree has confirmed that its various brands will remain separate. This not only includes Vodafone and Three, but also VOXI, SMARTY and Talkmobile. However, Vodafone will be the only brand for business customers. "A new era of connectivity has begun," Max Taylor, CEO, VodafoneThree, said. "We will connect every nation, every community, in every corner of the UK. "We will build the UK's best 5G network with an unprecedented £11bn privately funded infrastructure project, laying the digital foundation for our country's growth ambitions. "Benefits for our 27 million mobile customers will start within months, with access to roam across both networks at no extra cost. "From big cities to small towns, and everywhere in between, our mission is to build the UK's best network." Along with the coverage boost, VodafoneThree reckons it will make its cutsomer service better. Within two years the company will open two new customer care centres in Belfast and Sheffield, bringing 400 sales and customer service roles back to the UK, alongside the existing call centres in Glasgow and Stoke. Other exciting developments we can anticipate are the beta trials on a "first-of-its-kind," space-based satellite mobile network that VodaFoneThree says it will launch next year. This will support the existing network build, eliminating coverage gaps in places that otherwise couldn't be reached. Lastly, even customers of other providers - such as EE and O2 - will be able to try VodafoneThree's network with a seven-day, free, eSIM trial. By simply scanning a QR code, customers will be able to try the network with the same phone and same contact details. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'.


Daily Record
3 hours ago
- Daily Record
High street bank has important warning for anyone with a debit or credit card
The bank has issued an alert for debit and credit card holders in light of UK consumer confidence dipping A major high street bank has issued an important warning for anyone with a credit or debit card. Barclays has released a notice to all debit and credit card holders, highlighting a slowdown in spending in May. The bank, which competes with NatWest, Nationwide, Lloyds Bank, HSBC UK, TSB, and Santander, reported that consumer card spending rose by a mere 1.0 per cent year-on-year in May. This is a significant drop from the 4.5 per cent growth observed in April. The growth rate also falls short of the current CPIH inflation rate of 3.5 per cent, reports Birmingham Live. According to Barclays, consumers are "cutting back" due to dwindling confidence in their personal finances. The bank's research revealed a three-percentage-point decline in confidence in household finances, down to 67 per cent, and a four-percentage-point drop in the ability to spend on non-essential items, now standing at 56 per cent. Discretionary spending saw a modest 2.0 per cent increase, a notable decrease from the 5.1 per cent recorded in April, as nearly half (46 per cent) of UK adults expressed intentions to reduce their expenditures. Barclays' study also highlighted growing concerns in several areas, including 'shrinkflation' (up four percentage points to 82 per cent), 'streamflation', and interest rates (up three percentage points to 64 per cent). Karen Johnson, Head of Retail at Barclays, gave her thoughts as to why non-essential spending has dipped. "Consumers are clearly becoming more value-conscious as financial pressures persist, but they're still finding joy in the everyday - whether that's a small treat, a cinema trip, a garden project, or a carefully planned getaway," she said. The weather is not something Brits might consider when it comes to loosening the purse strings. But it turns out the elements play a role in our spending, and how much cash we part with at any given time. Scots enjoyed several scorchers for the majority of last month, with record-breaking sunshine and temperatures. However, despite no rain for the first 23 days of May, four weeks' worth of rain fell in just three days at the start of June, pushing it into wetter-than-average territory. "The double bank holidays in May and record sunshine will have given non-essential spending a helpful boost," Johnson noted. "But this was largely outweighed by the rainy weather in the second half of the month. "Meanwhile, longer-term uncertainty continues to shape how and where people choose to spend." The Barclays Consumer Spend report amalgamates hundreds of millions of customer transactions with consumer research to offer a comprehensive insight into UK spending. It comes as Barclays Bank is reducing its number of branches and has closed a significant number in the past few years. Branches throughout the UK, including Scotland, have disappeared, in light of changes in how people bank. Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community!