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The Best Deals From REI’s 2025 Holiday Sale

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The Best Deals From REI’s 2025 Holiday Sale


This year marks a decade of REI’s observance of the consumer high holy day, Black Friday. For the past 10 years REI has shut its doors for Black Friday, suggesting that instead potential customers should get outside and enjoy the world around you. That’s great advice, but of course Black Friday is also one of the biggest retail spending days of the year, and REI is a for-profit co-op—what to do? Have your holiday sale early, of course.

This year the REI Holiday Sale runs from November 14-24. There are two member-exclusive coupons with the Holiday Sale. The first is for 20 percent off a regular-priced item at REI, the second is 20 percent off any item at REI Outlet. Many of the best REI deals this year are on the company’s house brand gear, but we’ve also pulled in deals from competing sales at Backcountry, Six Moon Designs, Zenbivy, and other cottage industry retailers. Below are the best deals on all our favorite tents, backpacks, sleeping bags, pads, cookware, outdoor apparel, and more.

Not sure what you need? Check out our many outdoor gear guides, including guides to the best backpacking tents, best sleeping bags, best sleeping pads for backpacking, best base layers, best merino wool clothes, best rain jackets and many more for all our well-tested picks.

WIRED Featured Deals

Can’t You Just Put Links to All Your Outdoor Guides Right Here?

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Hiking & Backpacking Gear Guides:

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Outdoor Apparel Guides

Winter Sports

Deals on Backpacks

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

The Flash 22 is possibly the best value daypack on the market, especially now, on sale. This is a very lightweight, minimalist pack, but it’s surprisingly comfortable. It’ll handle loads up to 15 pounds without straining your shoulders, and the side stash pockets are large enough for a Nalgene bottle or rain jacket. The Flash 22 is made of 70-denier recycled ripstop nylon, which is on the lighter side, but mine has held up well, even on some rough cross country hikes in the North woods.

The ultralight cousin to the Flash 22, the Flash 18 lacks the hip belt, side stash pockets, and floating lid. The result is a stripped-down, bare-bones pack that we like because you can stuff it in your carry-on, and have a nice backpack whenever you need it. Don’t load it up with more than 8 pounds of gear, and avoid anything with pointy bits, as there’s no padding here, but so long as you recognize its limitations, this is a great little pack.

This travel backpack from Six Moon Designs makes it so you no longer have to pick between optimizing for air travel or carrying long distances at your destination. It’s the only bag I’ve used that maximizes your allotted carry-on space while remaining comfortable for a walk across a mid-sized European city or even a day on the trail. The bag’s square shape and suitcase handle make it easy to show the flight crew you’re compliant, but once you deplane, you have adjustable shoulder straps built by a brand that makes gear for serious backpackers. There’s also a padded harness with water bottle holders and a zipper pouches for Clif Bars or a flashlight. —Martin Cizmar

Which GoRuck Backpack GR2 green bag on wood floor

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

If I were going to live out of a single bag—traveling the world for the rest of my life—this is the bag I would bring. The GR2 is a gear-hauling monster with a ton of built-in organization options. This deal is on the 40L version, which I think is the perfect size for #onebag travel. It still manages to qualify as a carry-on bag for US flights (you may have trouble with that overseas though). The 34L waxed canvas version is also on sale for $340 ($115 off). And yes, it can double as a rucker, though there are better options if that’s your main use case. See below.

This deal is only on a couple of colors, and only the X-Pac fabric, but this is the cheapest we’ve seen the GR1 go for in quite some time. The GoRuck GR1 (7/10, WIRED Review) is the pack that launched the company, and it’s still the best and most versatile of the GoRuck lineup. This deal is on the smaller, 21L pack which I think is the perfect size for rucking, everyday carry, and weekend trips. I have lived out of the 21L bag (with a shoulder bag for my camera gear) during a weeklong trip. It was a squeeze, but it worked. The 21L GR1 is deceptively large and always seems to swallow more gear than I think it can.

If rucking is your thing, this is the GoRuck to get. It’s very close to the GR1 in size, layout, and fabric options, but the Rucker adds more handles, one on each side. The handles are so that the Rucker can be used as a weight (or kettlebell) in workouts. The interior has a Ruck Plate pocket for holding weight (the 20L version can handle up to 3-pound plates while the 25L can do up to 45-pound plates). The interior pockets are the same as the GR1, but instead of zippers, you get Velcro closures.

Camping and Backpacking Deals

The 31 Best Deals From REIs 2025 Holiday Sale

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

Six Moon Design’s Lunar Solo (7/10, WIRED Review) is my favorite single-wall ultralight solo tent. It’s not without its quirks (read the pitching tips), but if you want something more than a tarp, that still weighs just 26 ounces (740 grams), this one is hard to beat. It’s well ventilated for a single-walled tent, with the ability to raise up the front door when weather is nice. I also like that it only needs one trekking pole (or one pole if you don’t hike with trekking poles. You’d be hard pressed to find a tent even half this nice at this price.

I’ve noticed that, when trying to lighten their load with a smaller, lighter backpack, people then struggle to fit all their gear. The answer for sleeping bags and clothing is this compression stuff sack, which smashes anything soft down to about half the size of the same item in a regular stuff sack. This works well with sleeping bags and clothing, especially puffer jackets, but also fleece and merino wool.

The Flexlite Air camp chair is a great example of the promise of REI brand gear: it offers 90 percent of the designer item, for 70 percent of the price. It’s not quite as nice as the Nemo below, but it’s still comfortable (it does wobble a little, side to side when you move) and it’s nearly half the price.

Nemo Moonlite Elite Chair front view in the woods

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

I rarely bring a chair backpacking, but if I did, the Nemo Moonlite Elite would be in my pack. At 18 ounces, it’s one of the lightest chairs around, and it packs down nice and small. It’s comfortable and reasonable stable. Nemo also solved the main problem with all pole chairs; The included base pad keeps it from sinking into soft ground.

This is my favorite backpacking sleeping pad. With an R-Value of 5.4 and weighing just 18.2 ounces, the All-Season has the best R-Value-to-weight ratio of anything we’ve tested. There are lighter pads, like the Therm-a-rest NeoAir Xlite, but they are not as warm, nor as comfortable. The Tensor All-Season packs down well, rolling into a tiny stuff sack. It’s about the size of a 16-ounce Nalgene bottle. I often pair this with a closed cell foam pad like the Therm-a-Rest Z-Lite when camping in snow for a little extra insulation.

I have never slept so well camping as I have on this mat. Technically I have the car-friendly model, but in terms of comfort, they’re the same. In our guide to car camping pads the Therm-a-rest MondoKing edges out the Megamat for top pick among the monster sleeping pads, but I prefer the Megamat for it’s extra warmth (it has an R-value of 8.1 to the MondoKing’s R 7.0) and the soft texture of the top. It’s comfortable enough to sleep directly on the Megamat.

If you get the Exped Megamat, you’ll inflate it without this pump exactly one time. Then you will come back and buy this pump like a sane person. Save yourself even the one time and just get the pump with the pad. You’ll never know how much you should thank me, but that’s OK. Just carry on and have a good night’s sleep.

The 31 Best Deals From REIs 2025 Holiday Sale

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

My favorite stove for actually cooking real food in the backcountry, the Firebox Nano is a titanium (or steel, but I highly recommend titanium) shell that you can fit with an alcohol burner like the Trangia Spirit burner, or an isobutane burner. You can also use wood to cook directly over flames the way your ancestors did, and you should. For backpacking, with its frequent and pesky burn bans, the Firebox Gas Burner with its diffusion plate is hands down the best backcountry cooking system. It won’t win you any prizes at the next /r/Ultralight get-together (the Firebox Nano on its own weighs 4.25 ounces for the titanium version), but you could be eating some delicious food in the backcountry.

Outdoor Apparel Deals

REI CoOp Rainier Rain Jacket

Courtesy of REI

This is still the best budget rain jacket you can buy. REI’s Rainier Jacket is impressively waterproof and reasonably long-lasting for $70. The durable water repellent (DWR) is PFAS-free, but still pretty good. You also get taped seams and an adjustable hood, two nice features you generally don’t find in jackets this cheap.

REI’s Sahara Shade Hoodie offers UPF 50+ fabric (a polyester and spandex blend) to protect you from that high-altitude sun (or any sun). It’s soft and stretchy, so you have a good range of movement, and there are thumbholes in the sleeves to keep them from riding up and exposing your arms. The three-panel hood has a drawstring you can use the cinch it down and keep your neck covered as well. I do prefer merino sun hoodies, but they’re double the price, if not more.

The 31 Best Deals From REIs 2025 Holiday Sale

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

Smartwool’s 100 percent merino Classic Thermal base layer is a nice, heavy 250-gsm merino, base layer, making it a great base layer for cold weather. It’s our top pick heavyweight base layer. It fits looser, making it feel more like a comfortable shirt. The looser fit makes it possible to use this as a second base layer over something like Ibex Woolies when it’s extremely cold (this combo is something I wear all the time here in Northern Wisconsin). The bottoms are also on sale (Men’s/Women’s).

Icebreaker’s 200 Oasis base layer is a 200-gsm base layer. This is about what most of us call a midweight base layer, making it a good choice for everything from cool weather hiking in the fall or spring, to skiing in the front country. The 100 percent merino fibers here are not quite as soft at the Smartwool above, but they’re equally good at regulating body temperature and wicking away moisture. This is also the fastest drying merino top in our base layers guide.

REI’s base layers are a solid value. If you want one base layer to do it all and don’t want to spend a fortune, these are the base layers to get. You can have a crew top and bottom for less than a single garment of merino or a brand name synthetic. This is the midweight version, which is 220 GSM (92 percent recycled polyester, 8 percent spandex). They’re comfortable with a tight, but not overly-tight, fit that makes them easy to layer over, and there’s nice extras like thumb loops on the sleeves.

There are tons of neck gators out there, but this is my favorite (I actually have the slightly longer version, but this is close). Like most things merino it puzzles me how this keeps me warm in the winter, and keeps the sun off my neck in the summer without making me overheat. Somehow it manages this. These make great gifts for your outdoorsy friends too.

These Fjällräven pants are among my favorite hiking pants. The G-1000 fabric is 65 percent recycled polyester and 35 percent organic cotton. They’ve got pockets everywhere and extras like ventilation zippers, reinforced knees (with openings for pads), and a loop on the leg to hold a axe. Do your pants have a axe loop? Didn’t think so. Note that Fjällräven recently changed the fit, so if you’re an old school wearer of these, size up.

Sleeping Bag and Quilt Deals

Grey sleeping bag on top of light blue inflatable sleeping pad both laying in the grass

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

REI’s Magma 15 is one of our top sleeping bags. It’s warm (comfort rated to 21 degrees Fahrenheit) with a 15-denier nylon ripstop nylon shell (Bluesign approved, with a non-fluorinated DWR coating to keep moisture at bay). Baffles are variably spaced and not stitched through, which helps the fill stay put and minimizes cold spots. I also really like the Magma hood, which is warm and stays on your head throughout the night. There’s a nice interior stash pocket I use to keep my headlamp handy.

Nemo’s Forte 20 is a 30-degree (comfort rated) synthetic-fill sleeping bag, making it a good choice for summer. It’s our favorite synthetic bag. What I like most about this bag, and nearly all of Nemo’s sleeping bags, is the wider cut through the torso area down to the knees. This bag is almost a hybrid of a mummy bag and your father’s good old 1970s square sleeping bag. Which is to say, this bag is roomy.

We’re still working on a guide to backpacking quilts, but it will probably surprise no one to learn that this is our current pick for best value quilt. Like the Magma 30 sleeping bag, the Magma quilt is not the lightest, nor the warmest, but you get a lot, for not a lot. The 15-denier shell encloses 850-fill-power water-resistant goose down that’s comfort-rated down to 30 F. Weighing just 1 lb. 6 oz for a long, the Magma is on the light side for the temp rating. The footbox uses a zipper and drawstring system to be either completely open and flat, or zipped up and cinched down like a sleeping bag on cooler nights.

Nemo Pulse backpacking quilt in gray and lime green

Courtesy: Nemo Equipment

Nemo’s Pulse quilt is made of 1,000-fill duck down that keeps you warm while remaining extremely lightweight (just 18 ounces for the regular size). I’ve found this to be one of the warmest quilts I’ve tested. Nemo rates it to 20F, but I’d be willing to go down below that provided you have a good, well insulated sleeping pad. Part of the weight saving is the 10-denier ripstop shell, but it’s held up just find in my testing. My only complaint here is the footbox which does not come completely apart to lay flat.

Our favorite sleeping bag for summer car camping, the Siesta isn’t fancy, but hey, it’s car camping. If all else fails, there’s a car to retreat to. With that in mind, don’t spend a fortune on a car camping bag if that’s all you need. The Siesta gives you a nice, roomy, rectangular cut, and the 20-degree rating makes it enough for three-season trips. The bonus here is the hood, which you don’t often find in this type of bag. If you don’t need the hood, REI also has the new Campwell 30 degree bag on sale for $70 ($30 off).

Think of a Rumpl blanket as if your sleeping bag had a baby with the coziest lap blanket that your grandma knitted for you. They’re made from DWR-treated ripstop polyester, so they’re sturdy, durable, and resist getting soaked or stained. But they’re also soft and warm enough to fall asleep under on the couch, and they come in a wide variety of colors and patterns. —Adrienne So

Puffer Jacket and Winter Gear Deals

It’s already snowed once where I live. Now’s the time to score some new ski gear—jackets, helmets, gloves, and googles are all on sale.

A person with wearing the REI Magma 850 Puffer Jacket in twotone grey standing against a light brown wall

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

With an 850-fill-power goose down and a recycled ripstop nylon shell, this is one of the warmer jackets in our best puffer jackets guide. I like the zippered chest pocket (there are also two zippered hand pockets, one of which the jacket stuffs into), and at 12.5 ounces this jacket is surprisingly light for how warm it is. The front zip has a wind flap, and there’s even a draft collar, something you hardly ever find in a puffer at this price. Even better, you can cinch the hood to keep cold air from blowing in the sides.

Our favorite bargain three-season puffer jacket, the REI 650 down jacket isn’t as warm as the Magma above, but it’s hard to argue with this price. If you need a cheap, packable jacket for those cold summits or star gazing on chilly nights, this is the jacket to get. The stitched-through baffles mean this one isn’t as warm and is more susceptible to wind, but at this price, it’s worth buying.

Initially I did not like the idea of a down vest. If it’s cold enough to need a down jacket, my arms are probably cold too, right? But then I moved somewhere cold (Why? I don’t know, but I did) and realized there is an infinite variety of shades when it comes to cold. For some shades of cold, the vest is the right move. Pair it with a good base layer, maybe even a hoodie, and you have something that’s warm, but leaves your arms free to swing an ax or whatever you might be doing.

Fjällräven’s hybrid fill jacket uses 700-fill-power down for most of the jacket but adds recycled polyester insulation over the shoulders to help resist moisture. That later works quite well when the snow is really coming down. The hood does a good job of keeping you warm while staying out of your way thanks to two drawcord tabs at the front, and an elastic drawcord at the back. It also, as the name suggests, packs down pretty small.


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No Bad Weather: Stay Warm by Dressing in Layers

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No Bad Weather: Stay Warm by Dressing in Layers


Layering is not complicated. It’s the process of adding and removing layers of clothing to keep your body comfortable in changing weather and temperature conditions.

Billions of dollars have been spent trying to optimize this process (and sell you stuff), but it’s really very simple: Put clothing on when you’re cold, take clothing off when you’re hot. Which clothing? That’s the rub, as they say. But don’t worry. We’ll walk you through what each layer is, how to layer, and when you’ll want it. Once you’re done here, check out our guides to the Best Base Layers, Best Puffer Jackets, Best Merino Wool, and Best Rain Jackets for more.

Updated February 2026: We’ve updated our advice based on new experiences, and put in a few new picks culled from all the gear we’ve tested in the last year.

Layering Basics

Photograph: Carol Yepes/Getty Images

The key to layering is knowing what the layers are for and when to add and remove them. The high level overview looks like this:

  • Base layer: The layer that touches your skin. These provide some warmth, but they’re primarily important for wicking sweat away from your skin. Being damp means being cold.
  • Mid layer: The layer that’s—wait for it—in the middle. This is the layer where you actually start insulating, or trapping body heat. This is the key to the whole system and should usually be more than one layer (e.g., a lightweight fleece and a puffer jacket).
  • Outer layer: The top layer is the waterproof, windproof layer that makes sure that nature does not steal all that precious heat you’ve retained in the mid layer. This is sometimes referred to as a “shell.”

While you won’t always be wearing all of these, especially when you’re exerting yourself while walking, running, et cetera, it’s usually worth carrying all three. If it’s cold, you can start with all three on and peel them off as you get warmer. When it’s hot you can do the opposite, pulling out a shell when you stop on a windy ridge. Obviously there are situations where you don’t need to carry all of them. Hiking the Florida trail in July? Skip the mid layer, ya lunatic.

Base Layers

Smartwool all season merino long sleeve t-shirt in green

SmartWool

Merino Classic Long-Sleeve

Let’s start with underwear. Whether boxers, briefs, boxer briefs, or bras, go for materials that are going to help move moisture away from your skin. I have found merino wool to be ideal for underwear, but it’s worth trying different fabrics to find which works best for you.

Next comes what we generally think of as base layers: relatively tight-fitting but not overly restrictive pants and shirt with the dual purpose of insulating in cold weather and wicking sweat in hot. Again, there is a wide array of fabrics. If you opt for merino wool here, you benefit from wool’s natural ability to smooth out temperature variation across your skin, keeping you more evenly warm/cool (I call this temperature modulation).

There are also other options for fabric here, which includes Nuyarn. It has much of the benefits of merino (it’s usually more than half merino) but adds some nylon to provide extra strength and durability, as well as speeding up drying times. The latter can be important in very wet climates. In my experience, synthetic base layers do not perform as well at either insulation or moisture removal, though they will often dry faster, last longer, and are often cheaper.



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WBA publishes initial guidance on artificial intelligence, machine learning for intelligent Wi-Fi | Computer Weekly

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WBA publishes initial guidance on artificial intelligence, machine learning for intelligent Wi-Fi | Computer Weekly


The Wireless Broadband Alliance (WBA) has published a report outlining an industry-wide perspective for device manufacturers, network operators, enterprise IT and policymakers on how artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) can be integrated across the full Wi-Fi ecosystem.

The AI/ML for Wi-Fi: Enabling scalable, intelligent Wi-Fi ecosystems report was developed by the WBA AI/ML for Wi-Fi Project Group, and led by Intel with Airties, Cisco and HPE.

The founding viewpoint from the WBA is that traditional rule‑based management approaches for Wi‑Fi technology are no longer adequate as they are now asked to support increasingly support demanding applications such as enterprise collaboration, industrial automation, immersive media and AI workloads. The report outlines business benefits including lower operational costs, stronger reliability and security, and an improved user experience.

The report shows how AI and ML are becoming foundational to Wi-Fi, enabling a shift from reactive troubleshooting to predictive, proactive and self-optimising network operations capable of managing dense deployments and real-time performance demands.

In addition, it highlights how intelligent Wi-Fi has clear business value. AI/ML reduces operational costs (OpEx), improves reliability and security, and delivers a more consistent quality of experience (QoE). Moreover, the report argues that AI will not just sit at the router: instead, it will combine client, access point, edge and cloud intelligence to achieve the best performance.

However, it also observed that data is the primary bottleneck, and that achieving continued success and new use cases with AI/ML in networks requires shared datasets, federated learning and strong governance models. Fragmentation also remains a major barrier.

Going forward, WBA advises that standardisation should focus on frameworks and not algorithms. It added that interoperability will need to include data models, telemetry, application programming interfaces and model lifecycle management. WBA also believes that AI/ML-native Wi-Fi is the long-term technological direction and that features of Wi-Fi 8 (IEEE 802.11bn), such DBE and MAPC, will work optimally when driven by an AI/ML engine.

Commenting on the report, Tiago Rodrigues, Wireless Broadband Alliance president and CEO, said: “Wi-Fi is now expected to perform like critical infrastructure across homes, enterprises and cities, yet operational complexity is rising fast. AI and machine learning are becoming essential to keep networks reliable, secure and efficient at scale. The industry must align on common data, interfaces and governance, so that intelligent Wi-Fi can work across real-world multi-vendor environments and deliver value for all who use it.”

Matthew MacPherson, wireless chief technology officer at Cisco, added: “As Wi-Fi becomes the primary connectivity technology for mission-critical enterprise applications, the complexity of managing these environments has outpaced traditional manual methods.

“This report provides a vital framework for the industry to transition from reactive troubleshooting to a proactive, self-optimising architecture,” he said. “By leveraging AI and machine learning through interoperable standards, we are enabling organisations to reduce operational overheads and deliver a more resilient, high-quality experience for every user and device.”

Eric McLaughlin, vice-president and general manager of Intel, said: “AI/ML is transforming the future of Wi-Fi, and it has become a strategic imperative. We are excited to collaborate with our WBA partners and the broader ecosystem to accelerate its advancement to enable self-organising, proactive, and more reliable networks with improved QoE across the industry.”



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H&R Block Coupon: $50 Off In-Store Services

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H&R Block Coupon:  Off In-Store Services


As they say, the only things you can’t escape in life are death and taxes. Doing your own taxes has only gotten easier over the years but it’s still plenty confusing, especially with both federal and state rules and rates always in flux. To help you figure out this confusing process, I’ve written a guide on How to Pay Your Taxes Online, and included H&R Block and other competitors to give you more information as you navigate between the seemingly endless options available for your specific tax needs. Tax day may not be until April 15 but as we all know too well, that date comes around quickly each year. With that in mind, now’s a great time to start getting your affairs in order.

For 70 years, H&R Block has stepped in to help with tax preparation services that aim to make things as painless as possible. H&R Block has its classic in-person help from a tax expert along with easy-to-use online tax services that you can complete online while in your pajamas. We here at WIRED love to help you save money too, and that’s why we have rotating deals and H&R Block coupons to help ease the pain of tax season a little more.

Save With Our $50 H&R Block In-Store Coupon (And More)

To help make tax season a bit more bearable, you can get $50 off in-person tax prep when you file with an H&R Block tax pro (until February 23). To redeem this offer, you’ll need to make an appointment online, and present the coupon either digitally or in-print. This coupon features single-use codes, so you’ll need to click on the module at the top of the page to get the H&R Block discount code (and you can’t use the same one twice). Also through February 23, you can also get 25% off H&R Block’s DIY online offering, with no promo code needed!

Can I File My Taxes for Free at H&R Block?

H&R Block knows taxes are confusing, and the process is one that no filer looks forward to. That’s why H&R Block eases some of the tax filing woes by offering H&R Block Online Free Edition. Over half (around 55% of filers) qualify; this service is for simple taxes only, meaning Form 1040s and no schedules except Earned Income Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, Student Loan Interest, and Retirement Plan Distributions. File your simple state return for free on H&R Block today.

Don’t Go at it Alone With H&R Block Assistance Options

Tax assist options are available, whatever your need. Not a CPA or DIY-er? No problem. H&R Block’s tax experts are trained and ready to help with big and small tax questions. There are tons of choices, no matter your need, like a one-on-one meeting in an office where you can make an appointment ahead of time, or just walk in; from home where you can work with your Tax Pro online; and you can even drop off files at an H&R Block office. Plus, you can even get a free Second Look Review of past returns to see if there was money left on the table.

Get Up to $4,000 With a Refund Advance Loan at H&R Block

If you can’t wait on your refund (no judgement; I get it), you can get up to $4,000 in refunds immediately after filing, without waiting for the slow-moving federal and state processes. If eligible, you can get a Refund Advance loan within minutes of filing when you complete the process with an H&R Block Tax Pro. With this loan advance, there’s no loan fees or interest. Act sooner rather than later, as this deal is only available through March 15.

How Much Does H&R Block Charge?

H&R Block has different tiers depending on tax filing needs, so you can pick the online filing option that works best for you. The free online is best for simple returns, with $0 per state filed; deluxe starts at $28 for federal and $37 per state filed, which includes itemized deductions and free tax Pro review. Premium is now only $56 and $37 per state filed, and also includes investments and free tax Pro review. Plus, they have an option for self-employed folks and business owners, whose taxes can be complicated and costly. That service includes 1099 forms with expenses and includes free tax Pro reviews, and costs $68 right now with $37 per state filed.

How Do I Get an H&R Block Key Code?

An H&R Block Activation Code is a unique ten-character code that’s attached to your personal H&R Block Tax Software. It’ll be a long string of uppercase letters and numbers. This activation code registers your software and is used to unlock your five free federal e-files. Once opened, you’ll need to enter it to activate the software. More in-depth directions and troubleshooting can be found here.

Other Deals for New and Existing H&R Block Customers

To find which service best fits your needs, select all that apply to you—like if you have kids, own a home, or are a freelancer—to find your best personal filing experience. H&R Block has four different packages, including federal and state. Best of all, you can save 20% on H&R Block tax software products without an H&R Block promo code (until April 15).

H&R Block has tons of incentives and perks, including a free 3-year Second Look. That means H&R Block will review your last three tax returns to find errors, mistakes, or money others may have missed. Get your taxes done and spend the rest of the spring chilling; DIY online file, or get an in-store assisted file for less—no H&R Block coupon needed.



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