6pk Nature Valley Dark Chocolate Granola Bars for $10 after coupon

Thanks to a limited time 30% off clip-on in-cart coupon, you can get a 6-pack of Nature Valley Granola Oat Bars of the better-tasting Dark Chocolate kind for $10. The price before the coupon is $15. It is slightly less if you do a “Subscribe and Save”. This brings one package under $2, which is my “buy it now” price.

Each box contains six individually sealed wrappers. Each wrapper has two thin bars. Most people will eat both bars from a wrapper, so you are getting six servings. But no one is stopping you from eating only one bar, or half a bar 🙂

So to summarize, you are getting 36 individual wrappers, or 72 actual granola bars.

25% off select Nature Valley and Lara Bars with Prime Coupon

Nom-nom if you are a Prime member! You membership is hard at work with a new grocery clip-on coupon. Select nutritional bars from Nature Valley and Lara Bar are eligible for a 25% off clip-on coupon. The coupon is on the current price, which can change at any time, but given current prices, it makes for some pretty good deals. For example, a 16-pack of Lara Bars for under $12.

The coupon is good for regular purchases and also for “Subscribe and Save”. Any eligible products will show this promotion on their individual product page. This will only work if Amazon actual is the seller, so pay attention to the listing, so you add to cart Amazon’s own offer, not marketplace sellers.

The promotion expires on Tuesday July 11 at 11:59pm pacific, or earlier for any bars that sell out and can no longer be ordered before the coupon expiration.

I am definitely scooping up a Lara Bar 16-packs. Now I have to decide whether to make it a bigger order and take advantage of some of the Add-On deals or not 🙂

36 pouches of Nature Valley Granola Bars Variety Pack for $9.50 after coupon

Granola bar deal time! If you like the Nature Valley trio of flavors (Oats’n’Honey, Maple Brown Sugar, and Peanut Butter), there is a nice coupon deal of this option, it’s a 3-pack of 12-pouch variety packs. Each pouch has two thin bars inside, that’s why they call it a 24-pack. So you get 36 pouches which translates to 72 thin bars. The price is currently $12.63 at Amazon.com. Then you hit that green “Clip 25% off Coupon” button, and the price drops by 25% to around $9.50. This is the one time purchase price. Screenshot of that below:

nature_valley_coupon

If you are willing to do “Subscribe and Save”, it is 25% off $12, which makes it $9 for the whole thing.

So to boil it down to grocery store price comparison, the 36 pouches are the equivalent of six standard grocery packs (six pouches of 12 total bars inside). For those, $2 or less is a good price, so anything under $12 for the same amount is a good deal!

A good deal unless you are willing those big Costco and Smart and Final type of mega-packs 🙂

NOTE: the coupon is a limited time offer but it doesn’t say when it expires.

Feb 7-13: buy 2 Nature Valley packs for $4, get $1 Extrabuck

If you like Nature Valley nutrition bars but don’t need to buy Costco-level quantities, there is a nice deal at CVS stores for ExtraBucks rewards members running February 7-13 (2016) as their “Healthy Deal of the Week”. Screenshot from the ad below:

cvs_nature_valley

You buy two packs of Nature Valley granola bars (six individually wrapped per pack) for $4 and you receive $1 ExtraBuck for future purchase. So this makes it a very nice $1.50 per pack. The standard ones are perhaps the best in terms of bang for the buck and nutrition, but to each his or her own 🙂

This offer also includes select cereal from General Mills and Kellogg’s as well, so you could mix and match. The ad says this is a “limit one per household” for the week.

TIP: always check the limits printed on your receipt after you buy an eligible item. Sometimes the ad says “limit one” but it’s actually “limit two”. If the receipt tells you have more available (eg offer is not completed), you can buy more. It is the cash register computer that decides what’s eligible, not the text in the ad – because it’s the cash register computer that prints the ExtraBucks 🙂