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7 Best Coupon Extensions for 2026

Last updated February 25, 2026 · 8 min read

We installed and tested every major coupon browser extension on 50+ retailers including Amazon, Nike, Target, Walmart, and Best Buy. We measured auto-apply success rates, code freshness, privacy policies, and price comparison accuracy. Here's our honest ranking.

Table of Contents

  1. PromoIQ — Best Overall
  2. Honey (PayPal) — Most Popular
  3. Capital One Shopping — Best for Capital One Users
  4. Cently — Best Minimalist Option
  5. Karma — Best for Price Tracking
  6. RetailMeNot — Largest Code Database
  7. Coupert — Best Cashback Integration

What We Tested

For each extension, we evaluated: auto-apply success rate (did it find working codes?), code freshness (how many expired codes?), privacy (what data does it collect?), price comparison (does it show cheaper alternatives?), and user experience (speed, design, intrusiveness).

#1 — Best Overall
PromoIQ

PromoIQ takes a fundamentally different approach: it verifies codes with confidence scores before applying them, shows cross-retailer price comparisons with direct product links, and collects zero browsing data. It only activates when you click it — no background tracking.

  • AI-powered confidence scoring filters out expired codes
  • Cross-retailer price comparison across 20+ stores
  • Zero data collection — activates only on click
  • Auto-apply works on 50+ retailer checkouts
  • Free forever tier with full features
  • Newer — smaller user base than Honey
  • Premium tier for unlimited searches coming soon
Verdict: The best coupon extension if you care about accuracy and privacy. PromoIQ doesn't waste your time with expired codes, and its price comparison actually links you to cheaper products instead of just showing search results.
#2 — Most Popular
Honey (by PayPal)

Honey is the most well-known coupon extension with over 17 million users. It auto-applies codes at checkout and offers a rewards program (Honey Gold). However, since PayPal acquired it in 2020, users have reported more expired codes and increased data collection.

  • Huge user base and brand recognition
  • Honey Gold cashback rewards
  • Works on many sites
  • High rate of expired/non-working codes
  • Collects browsing and purchase data for PayPal
  • Auto-apply can be slow (tests all codes sequentially)
  • No cross-retailer price comparison
Verdict: Still decent for casual use, but the PayPal data collection and expired code problem have eroded trust. If you want better accuracy, look at PromoIQ or Cently.
#3 — Best for Capital One Users
Capital One Shopping

Formerly Wikibuy, Capital One Shopping offers auto-apply, price comparison, and Capital One Shopping Credits. The catch: it's built to funnel you into the Capital One ecosystem.

  • Good price comparison with historical data
  • Shopping Credits rewards
  • No Capital One card required to use
  • Shares data with Capital One
  • Best rewards require Capital One card
  • Interface can feel cluttered
Verdict: A solid option if you're already in the Capital One ecosystem. Otherwise, the data sharing and card-focused rewards make it less appealing than privacy-first alternatives.
#4 — Best Minimalist Option
Cently

Cently (formerly Coupons at Checkout) is lightweight and unobtrusive. It quietly tries codes at checkout without a flashy interface.

  • Clean, minimal UI
  • Fast auto-apply
  • Low resource usage
  • Smaller code database
  • No price comparison
  • No confidence scoring — you don't know if codes are fresh
Verdict: Great if you want something lightweight that stays out of your way. But the smaller database means you'll miss savings that other extensions catch.
#5 — Best for Price Tracking
Karma

Karma's strength is price drop alerts — add items to your list and get notified when prices fall. The coupon feature is secondary.

  • Excellent price drop alerts
  • Wishlist across multiple stores
  • Clean interface
  • No auto-apply for promo codes
  • Limited coupon database
  • Price tracking only — no code verification
Verdict: Use Karma alongside a coupon extension for the best combo. On its own, it won't help at checkout.
#6 — Largest Code Database
RetailMeNot

RetailMeNot has been around since 2006 and has one of the largest coupon databases. Their browser extension brings those codes to checkout, but the experience is dated.

  • Massive coupon database
  • Cashback offers on select retailers
  • Long track record
  • Many codes are expired or store-specific
  • Extension feels outdated compared to competitors
  • Auto-apply is unreliable
  • Heavy advertising on the website
Verdict: The website is still useful for browsing deals, but the extension hasn't kept up with modern alternatives. A big database means nothing if half the codes are expired.
#7 — Best Cashback Integration
Coupert

Coupert combines auto-apply coupons with a built-in cashback system. It's lesser-known but has been growing steadily.

  • Cashback on 7,000+ stores
  • Auto-apply works reasonably well
  • Growing code database
  • Cashback payouts can be slow
  • Less transparent about data practices
  • Smaller community than Honey or Capital One
Verdict: A decent all-rounder if cashback is your priority. For pure coupon accuracy, PromoIQ or Cently are better choices.

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How We Picked Our Rankings

Our methodology weighted five factors equally: auto-apply success rate (tested on 50 retailers), code freshness (% of codes that actually work), privacy (data collection policies), price comparison (cross-retailer product matching), and UX (speed, design, non-intrusiveness). We believe a coupon extension should save you money without costing you your privacy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are coupon extensions safe?

Most are safe to install, but they vary widely in data collection. Extensions like Honey and Capital One Shopping collect browsing data. PromoIQ and Cently take a more privacy-conscious approach. Always read the privacy policy before installing.

Do coupon extensions actually save money?

Yes — on average, users save $5-15 per transaction when a working code is found. The key is "working code" — extensions with confidence scoring (like PromoIQ) waste less time on expired codes.

Can I use multiple coupon extensions?

You can, but they may conflict during auto-apply. We recommend picking one primary extension and using the others for price tracking or manual code browsing.