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Best Apple deals for Amazon Prime Day 2025 UK – MacBooks, iPads, and more

Best Apple deals for Amazon Prime Day 2025 UK – MacBooks, iPads, and more

Yahoo20-06-2025

Apple fans won't want to miss the savings during Amazon Prime Day, the biggest shopping event of the year behind Black Friday.
While Apple is known for rarely discounting its products, Amazon can sometimes offer some great deals on MacBooks, iPads, and other Apple tech during its Prime sales. When the event arrives, our tech team will be updating this guide with the best live discounts on Apple gear throughout the sale.
Amazon Prime Day is a shopping event that's available exclusively to Amazon Prime members. They're able to shop thousands of discounts in the discount extravaganza, which typically takes place over two full days in July each year. We're anticipating major price drops for beauty products, toys, books, and travel products.
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Prime Day tech deals: Amazon Prime Day headphone deals | Amazon Prime Day laptop deals | Amazon Prime Day deals on Amazon devices
Apple doesn't usually promote heavy discounts, especially through third-party sellers like Amazon. However, during events like Prime Day, you can find price drops on a wide range of Apple devices.
In 2025, Amazon Prime Day is confirmed to be a super-sized four-day event, running from 00:01 on Tuesday 8 July to midnight on Friday 11 July.
The best way to stay on top of the latest Apple deals during Big Deal Days is to check Amazon directly or keep an eye on this article, as we'll be updating it regularly with any exciting discounts.
Other Prime Day deal roundups: Amazon Prime Day vacuum cleaner deals | Amazon Prime Day deals for your garden | Amazon Prime Day alcohol deals | Amazon Prime Day deals for pet owners
Amazon's UK Apple store carries a comprehensive range of the brand's products, including the best iPhones, the best iPads, MacBooks, Apple Watches, AirPods, and Apple TV devices.
In addition to new products, you can also find refurbished Apple devices — like refurbished Apple Watches, refurbished MacBooks and refurbished iPads — on Amazon. They're often available at even lower prices, making them a great option if you're looking for a bargain.
We've spotted some solid deals on Apple products at Amazon. Here are some of the top live discounts you can find right now:If you want a Bluetooth speaker that's just as easy to pair and use with your iPhone, iPad and Mac as your AirPods are, the latest revamped Beats Pill is the one to get. We reviewed the Beats Pill when it launched, finding it sounds fantastic and is both versatile and stylish too.
£95.00 at amazon.co.ukThe USB-C Apple Pencil is the entry-level model launched in 2023. It charges via a USB-C port and offers more limited features compared to the other Apple Pencil models, but it's especially great for those on a budget.
It works with many iPad models, including the newest iPad Pro M4 and iPad Air M3 – it also works with 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th generation 12.9-inch iPad Pros, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th generation 11-inch iPad Pros, the 4th, 5th and 6th generation iPad Air models, the 6th generation iPad mini and the beginner-friendly 10th and 11th generation iPads.
£69.00 at amazon.co.ukMost colour variations of the over-ear Beats Studio Pro headphones are now down to at least £175.00 from £349.99 – we've tried them, and they're a great pair of cans for their noise-cancelling, engaging sound, comfortable ear cups and seamless Apple device compatibility, with many of the features of the pricier AirPods Max included in this model.
£175.00 at amazon.co.uk
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Trump Cuts Off Trade Talks With Canada Over Digital Services Tax
Trump Cuts Off Trade Talks With Canada Over Digital Services Tax

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Cuts Off Trade Talks With Canada Over Digital Services Tax

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What is Canada's digital services tax — and why does Trump dislike it so much?
What is Canada's digital services tax — and why does Trump dislike it so much?

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

What is Canada's digital services tax — and why does Trump dislike it so much?

In the last few weeks and months, U.S. President Donald Trump has given a number of rationales for escalating the trade dispute between Canada and the United States. On Friday, he zeroed in on Canada's digital services tax — a new levy expected to cost the largest American tech giants billions of dollars in the coming years after it kicks in on Monday. International trade lawyer William Pellerin was only shocked the U.S. president didn't bring it up sooner. "It's actually quite surprising that it took them this long to make a big stink about this issue," Pellerin, who works for McMillan LLP, told CBC News Network on Friday. "If the U.S. was going to take a run at this and really has had a beef with Canada on this issue for a really long time, they really had no choice but to escalate that issue at the last minute now." Here's what you need to know about the tax, which has been a thorn in the side of the Canada-U.S. relationship for years. Canada's digital services tax (DST) affects mega companies that offer digital services — like online advertising or shopping — and earn more than $20 million in revenue from Canadian sources. Giant companies like Amazon, Apple, Airbnb, Google, Meta and Uber will be taxed three per cent on the money they make from Canadian users and customers. The levy has been in place since last year, but the first payments are due starting Monday. It's retroactive to 2022, so companies will end up with a $2-billion US bill due by the end of July. Revenue is one big benefit. The Parliamentary Budget Office estimated last year that the tax would bring in more than $7 billion over five years. The Liberals first promised the tax during the federal election in 2019 under former prime minister Justin Trudeau, but it was delayed for years because a number of other nations wanted to work together on one, overarching digital taxation plan that could be applied in multiple countries. As the delays dragged on, Canada went ahead with its own tax plan. Aside from revenue, Ottawa has pitched the DST as a way to bring the tax code up to date and capture revenues earned in Canada by firms located abroad. The United States has been hostile to the tax from the beginning because it largely affects American tech giants. Officials have argued the tax discriminates against American companies and Congress, notoriously divided between Democrats and Republicans, found a moment of common ground in criticizing Canada's plan. The Computer & Communications Industry Association has estimated U.S. companies could pay as much as $1 billion a year in tax if the measure remains on the books. A number of industry experts — from lawyers to cross-border groups and commerce associations — have warned for years that the tax would strain the relationship between Canada and the U.S., with one going so far as to predict in 2023 that the tax alone would be to blame for a trade war. WATCH | Trump says he's ending talks with Canada over DST: Canadian and U.S. business groups, organizations representing U.S. tech giants and American lawmakers all signed letters in recent weeks calling for the tax to be eliminated or paused. But Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said the legislation was passed by Parliament, and Canada would be "going ahead" with the tax. Pellerin, the international trade lawyer, said he suspects the federal government will avoid changing its plan because it's taken a strategy of avoiding knee-jerk reactions to Trump's negotiation tactics. "The Trump administration is not known for negotiating quietly in the back rooms or in the hallways of power … so I don't think this is unexpected," he said. Trump says he's pulling back from the bilateral trade discussions because Canada plans to move ahead with its DST on Monday, a move he described online as "a direct and blatant attack on our country." The move put the 30-day deadline to reach an agreement in the trade dispute into doubt. The Biden administration also opposed the tax, but tried to resolve the issue differently: It asked Canada for dispute settlement consultations under the Canada-United States-Mexico-Agreement (CUSMA) last August. That consultation period ended in November without the Biden administration taking the case to the next step, but there is no time limit on when the U.S. could pick that plan back up — so the CUSMA route is still available to the current administration if Trump wanted to move away from his current tactic. Yes. France, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom all have tax regimes in place, to name a few.

38 Best Early Amazon Prime Day Deals On Products We've Tested (2025)
38 Best Early Amazon Prime Day Deals On Products We've Tested (2025)

WIRED

timean hour ago

  • WIRED

38 Best Early Amazon Prime Day Deals On Products We've Tested (2025)

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