VistaPrint storefront celebrates with balloons and 30% off coupon as happy customers enter with promotional materials

VistaPrint Slashes Prices: 50% Off Wedding Invites, 20% Storewide

At a Glance

  • New customers score 20% off first orders $100+ with a single code
  • Wedding invites drop to $90 for 100-a straight 50% cut
  • Premium members unlock 40% off everything plus global discounts

Why it matters: Custom printing just got cheaper for small businesses, brides, and anyone who wants a pillow with a face on it.

VistaPrint, the long-time go-to for custom business cards, mugs, and oddball gifts, is running a stack of deals that knock as much as half off the sticker price. News Of Fort Worth‘s breakdown shows how to claim every discount, whether you’re ordering one poster or 500 wedding invitations.

New-Customer Code Delivers 20% Off

Copy the current VistaPrint promo code at checkout and new buyers automatically save 20% on any order of $100 or more. The code box sits directly below the order total; paste, apply, and the discount drops instantly.

Tiered Spend Bonuses

No code? No problem. VistaPrint runs parallel promos that scale with cart size:

  • $10 off purchases of $100+
  • $20 off purchases of $150+
  • $50 off purchases of $250+

Text Sign-Up = 15% Off Next Order

Enter a phone number in the pop-up footer and VistaPrint fires over a one-time 15% voucher good on the following purchase. The text list also pings users when flash codes drop.

Premium Membership Unlocks 40% Off

Frequent shoppers can step up to VistaPrint’s annual plan. Members receive:

  • Up to 40% off every product, no cap
  • 30% off Depositphotos subscriptions
  • Unbranded packaging for client work
  • Global discounts when traveling

The first 30 days are free; cancel or keep it rolling at the regular rate.

Wedding Invites at Half Price

Through the end of the month, three invitation styles are on promo:

  • 100 Classic Wedding Invitations: $90 (was $180)
  • 80 Letterpress Wedding Invitations: $260 (was $345)
  • 100 Wedding Party Invitations: $90 (was $180)

Each line is fully customizable-colors, fonts, photo uploads, and envelope liners.

Postcards Drop 30%

Postcards now start at $0.28 apiece when ordered in packs of 100. Formats run from coupon-size mailers to oversized 6×9 pieces, all printed on 14-pt matte or gloss stock.

How to Redeem in Three Steps

  1. Build the product-upload art, tweak text, pick paper
  2. Copy the matching code from News Of Fort Worth‘s VistaPrint coupon page
  3. Paste the code in the promo box at checkout and hit apply

If the deal is automatic (like the wedding promo), simply add the qualifying item to cart and the markdown appears.

What You Can Still Customize

VistaPrint’s catalog covers:

  • Business cards, banners, flyers
  • T-shirts, hoodies, baby onesies
  • Mugs, plates, pillows, puzzles
  • Calendars, photo books, canvas prints
  • Wedding suites, graduation invites, divorce party invites
Three colorful spending tiers show discount rewards with $10 $20 and $50 savings and playful icons

Quick Price Check

Product Regular Price Deal Price
100 Wedding Invites $180 $90
500 Business Cards $60 $48 (after 20% code)
1 18×24 Poster $24 $19.20 (after 20% code)
Premium Membership $0 for 30 days Free trial

Fine Print

Codes stack only with free-shipping thresholds; most promos cannot be combined. Wedding invite sale ends at 11:59 pm local time on the last calendar day of the month.

Bottom Line

Whether you need 500 business cards by Monday or 100 wedding invites before the shower, VistaPrint’s current promos drop prices to as low as half off. Grab the code, load the cart, and the savings autopilot from there.

Author

  • Cameron found his way into journalism through an unlikely route—a summer internship at a small AM radio station in Abilene, where he was supposed to be running the audio board but kept pitching story ideas until they finally let him report. That was 2013, and he hasn't stopped asking questions since.

    Cameron covers business and economic development for newsoffortworth.com, reporting on growth, incentives, and the deals reshaping Fort Worth. A UNT journalism and economics graduate, he’s known for investigative business reporting that explains how city hall decisions affect jobs, rent, and daily life.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *