logo
Lidl to bring back Dyson vacuum dupe that's £189.99 cheaper than the big brand in DAYS

Lidl to bring back Dyson vacuum dupe that's £189.99 cheaper than the big brand in DAYS

The Sun2 days ago
LIDL is bringing back its Dyson vacuum dupe for £189.99 less than the original.
The Silvercrest Cordless Cyclone Vacuum Cleaner offers a similar design and features at a fraction of the price.
Lidl 's Dyson dupe is hitting stores on Sunday, July 13 - priced at just £69.99.
The appliance is a 2-in-1 vacuum and wet mop, featuring a handled unit for reaching tricky spots and offering a longer run time in ECO mode.
In comparison, the Dyson cordless vacuum delivers stronger suction, advanced filtration and up to 40 minutes of fade-free power with quieter performance.
Lidl's vacuum is priced at £69.99, while the Dyson cordless model costs £249.99 on Dyson's website, reduced from its original price of £329.99.
This is just of a series of dupes rolled out by the supermarket as of late.
Lidl is also offering the Beldray REVO Cordless Handheld Vacuum Cleaner for £39.99 as part of its middle aisle deals.
The lightweight device is being hailed as a dupe for the Shark Cordless Handheld Vacuum, which typically sells for £129.99.
The chain is also selling a multifunctional air fryer with grill and smoker features for £99.99 - nearly half the price of a similar model from Ninja.
The appliance functions as an air fryer when the lid is closed and as a grill when open.
The smoker function can be activated separately while the lid is closed.
Parents race to Lidl for middle aisle bargains including 2 in 1 sandpit for £29
There are seven programmes for smoking, grilling, air-frying, roasting, baking, dehydrating and reheating.
The budget-friendly supermarket is also selling a jacket inspired by the designer style famously worn by Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher.
The Lidl by Lidl coat - named after the band's 2002 single Little by Little - is being sold for £30 in the chain's signature red, yellow and blue colours.
Last October, Liam modelled a £400 Berghaus jacket in the same colours, which prompted fans to joke that he looked like a Lidl employee.
One fan joked: 'Lidl are asking for their staff back!'
Another chimed in: 'Proper Lidl worker's jacket.'
In a nod to the band's Mancunian roots, Lidl unveiled the jacket on a 30ft 'wonderwall' outside Manchester 's Etihad Stadium, the Gallagher brothers' hometown ground.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ban some foreigners from sickness benefits, Badenoch urges
Ban some foreigners from sickness benefits, Badenoch urges

BBC News

time41 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Ban some foreigners from sickness benefits, Badenoch urges

Kemi Badenoch will call for foreign nationals to be barred from claiming disability and sickness benefits, as she sets out plans for tighter curbs on a speech on Thursday, the Tory leader will describe Britain's benefits bill as a "ticking time bomb" that could "collapse the economy".It comes after the party outlined some of its own proposals to reduce spending, after Labour largely gutted its own plan for benefits cuts after a backbench to bring in remaining government cuts to sickness benefits was approved by MPs on Wednesday evening. But other proposals, including changes to the eligibility criteria for disability benefits, have effectively been put on hold. The government announced plans to shrink welfare spending in March, warning the working-age welfare bill was set to rise by nearly £30bn by 2030 and reforms to the system were required to ensure it remained wanted to make it harder to claim personal independence payment (Pip), the main disability benefit in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and make health-related top-ups for universal credit less generous. But ministers significantly watered down the cuts earlier this month after a huge rebellion from Labour MPs, all but wiping out savings estimated to be worth £5bn a year by the end of the decade. Plans to freeze the higher rate of universal credit for existing health-related claimants have been reversed, whilst all changes to the Pip system have been parked pending a government review into the assessment her speech on Thursday, Badenoch will accuse Labour of being "beholden to left-wing MPs" and "turning a blind eye" to rising benefit will also seek to create a dividing line with Reform UK over the two-child benefit cap, which Nigel Farage's party has pledged to scrap, branding him "Jeremy Corbyn with a pint and a cigarette"."On welfare he shows his true colours - promising unaffordable giveaways with no plan to fix the system," she is expected to add.A Labour spokesperson said "The Conservatives had 14 years to reform welfare - instead, they left the country with a broken system that holds people back and fails to support the most vulnerable."The party also warned that the Conservative proposal could see disabled British nationals living abroad being denied support if other countries decided to take a similar approach. Tory welfare proposals The Conservatives have not backed the government's legislation to deliver the changes, arguing its proposals do not go far have set out some plans of their own to shrink welfare spending in the form of amendments to the government's plans, which were defeated on include limiting access to Pips and the health-related part of universal credit to those with "less severe" mental health conditions, and preventing claimants from receiving payments without a face-to-face also say both benefits should only be paid to British citizens, with exceptions for those covered by international agreements, such as citizens from EU countries who have acquired settled status in the the moment, foreign nationals gain access to the welfare system when they are granted indefinite leave to remain or refugee status. Applicants for Pip generally need to have lived in Britain for at least two of the last three seekers are not allowed to apply for benefits, although they have access to taxpayer-funded accommodation and separate financial shadow minister Neil O'Brien has said he has obtained figures under freedom of information laws showing universal credit payments to households containing at least one foreign national stood at £941m a month as of working out the exact scale of payments to non-UK nationals specifically is complicated, because the Department for Work and Pensions does not provide a breakdown of claimants by immigration status and the department is due to publish the first such breakdown next week, and has committed to updates every three months thereafter. Sign up for our Politics Essential newsletter to read top political analysis, gain insight from across the UK and stay up to speed with the big moments. It'll be delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

UK housing market steadies after tax hike downturn, RICS says
UK housing market steadies after tax hike downturn, RICS says

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

UK housing market steadies after tax hike downturn, RICS says

MANCHESTER, England, July 10 (Reuters) - A downturn in Britain's housing market that followed a tax hike on property transactions in April eased off in June, according to chartered surveyors who expect a broadly flat picture in the months ahead. The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said on Thursday its measure of new buyer enquiries turned positive for first time since December and agreed sales also improved. But the change suggested a stable market rather than an upturn. A balance of house prices was steady at -7%, meaning more surveyors reporting prices fell than rose, with London and the south east of England among the regions with the biggest drops. The survey chimed with other signs of a subdued property market after buyers rushed earlier in the year to beat the March 31 expiry of a tax break for some home purchases. Earlier this week, mortgage lender Halifax said house prices were flat last month. An expected further drop in interest rates later this year is likely to help the market, analysts have said. "The UK residential market appears to be entering a more settled phase, with demand showing signs of stabilising following a period of volatility," said Tarrant Parsons, RICS head of market research and analysis. "The earlier distortion caused by transactions being brought forward ahead of the Stamp Duty changes now appears to have largely dissipated, allowing underlying trends to re-emerge." Parsons pointed to a modest increase in expectations for sales in the near term but he said economic uncertainty - at home and globally - could hit activity.

Is it time for a wealth tax on the super-rich?
Is it time for a wealth tax on the super-rich?

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Is it time for a wealth tax on the super-rich?

After cuts in Labour's proposed welfare reform bill caused uproar, many of the party's supporters insist it's time for a different approach. Rather than cutting the benefits bill or public spending, why not tax the wealthiest more? It's a question Keir Starmer was asked in PMQs, and he replied by saying it wasn't possible to 'tax our way to growth'. The millionaire Dale Vince disagrees. A former new-age traveller who made his money in green energy and has donated to Just Stop Oil, he is part of the Patriotic Millionaires organisation who think it is high time people like them are asked to increase their contributions. 'There's a whole bunch of us. We're all saying the same thing, that we can afford to pay more tax. Rich people should pay more tax, and we can use that money to reduce inequality in our country.' The tax expert and economics professor Arun Advani explains how a wealth tax could work and what the dangers could be. Would it send millionaires fleeing from the UK – and would that matter? And what other levers are at the government's disposal?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store