What “Advil discount” are you referring to, and is there a purchase limit?
The term “Advil discount” usually refers to one of these:
- A coupon at checkout (digital coupon, paper coupon)
- A store promotion (e.g., buy one get one, % off for a limited time)
- A manufacturer offer or loyalty deal
Each type can have different rules, including limits on how many units you can buy using the discount (for example, “limit 1 per transaction” or “up to 2 items per coupon”). The exact limit depends on the specific coupon/promo terms attached to the offer you’re using.
Where to find the limit
Look for the fine print on:
- The coupon page (often near the barcode or “offer details”)
- The email/app promotion terms
- The receipt/checkout prompt for the coupon
Common restrictions include:
- A cap on the number of items discounted per transaction
- A cap per household or per customer over the promotion period
- An expiration date after which the discount won’t apply
Why the limit might show up at checkout
Even if an offer sounds broad, checkout systems often enforce:
- “Single coupon per order” rules
- Limits by product size/form (only certain Advil formulations qualify)
- Restrictions to “in-stock” items or specific brands/pack sizes
If you try to apply the discount to a quantity beyond the allowed cap, the system may reduce the discount, deny it, or require a different qualifying item.
If you tell me the details, I can help interpret the limit
Share either:
- The retailer (Target, Walmart, CVS, Walgreens, etc.)
- A screenshot or the exact wording of the coupon/promo terms
- Or the link/photo of the offer (including the “offer details”)
Then I can tell you what the limit is for that specific Advil discount and how it typically applies to quantities in one purchase.