Gift card to be used in UK?

<p>We’ve been invited to a friends’ son’s wedding in London. Unfortunately, we can’t go - but we figured we’d send a gift card.</p>

<p>What’s the best way to send the couple a gift card they can use in UK? Are there any gift cards that don’t charge a fee upfront?</p>

<p>Thanks.</p>

<p>Check out Amazon.co.uk or eBay.co.uk or if you know the place you can go to the website, for example, I have sent a Starbucks.co.uk card to a person in the UK</p>

<p>I send gift cards to family in the UK regularly. Marks and Spencers would be a good choice, but they do charge a delivery fee.</p>

<p><a href=“http://www.marksandspencer.com/[/url]”>http://www.marksandspencer.com/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Not all sites will allow you to enter a US credit card. I have also sent Argos, John Lewis and Amazon is always a fav. Make sure you enter the UK site.</p>

<p>Amazon is always a good option for online choice, but another option would be Love2Shop, which does vouchers that can be used at a wide range of offline shops. The major advantage of Love2Shop is that if any one business goes into administration (as quite a few major retailers have done recently) then any gift card becomes worthless, but with Love2Shop they can be used elsewhere.
[Love2shop</a> gift vouchers - Free Delivery | highstreetvouchers.com](<a href=“Request Rejected”>Request Rejected)</p>

<p>If that doesn’t appeal, then I’d suggest giving vouchers to a department store like John Lewis (good quality, and ‘never knowingly undersold’, but they don’t stock the cheapest brands), Marks and Spencers or Debenhams. Out of those three, I’d personally opt for John Lewis, assuming your budget will stretch to cover something appropriate (check the website!). </p>

<p>Alternatively - have you checked that they haven’t set up a wedding list?</p>