creditmycart.com

June 27, 2026

My Practical Verdict

Creditmycart.com should be treated as a high-risk reward landing page, not as an official Tesco service.

The site may send rewards to some users, but there is not enough clear information to call it safe or dependable.

I would not enter payment details, a Tesco password, identity documents, or sensitive financial information on this site.

The main concern is not simply the large £750 figure.

The concern is the unclear operator, hidden reward conditions, outside tracking link, very young domain, and weak public history.

What Creditmycart.com Offers

Creditmycart.com promotes the chance to receive up to £750 in Tesco vouchers.

The page says visitors must register, complete sponsored deals, and wait for those deals to be verified.

The listed activities include surveys, free trials, and app downloads.

It says completing three to five deals lets a user start earning, while more deals are needed to increase the total reward.

The page also says an approved voucher code will arrive by email within 24 to 48 hours.

This does not mean every person receives £750 after completing three deals.

The words “start earning” and “up to £750” leave room for many smaller reward levels.

The 24-to-48-hour period also appears to begin only after the required deals have been completed and verified.

That verification process is not clearly explained on the public page.

It Is Not an Official Tesco Website

The site is hosted at creditmycart.com rather than tesco.com or another clearly identified Tesco domain.

Tesco’s genuine Clubcard vouchers are managed through the Tesco Grocery and Clubcard app or through Tesco.com.

Tesco says Clubcard members normally turn collected points into vouchers, with at least 150 points needed before requesting them.

Tesco also maintains an official competitions page where each promotion is shown with access to its terms and conditions.

Creditmycart.com does not appear on those official Tesco pages as a standard Clubcard service.

The Creditmycart page calls its service “BasketBonus,” but it does not clearly explain the legal relationship between BasketBonus and Tesco.

It also does not clearly state that Tesco sponsors or manages the offer.

A separate website called RewardLeap displays almost the same wording, process, £750 value, and delivery promise.

That other page clearly states that Tesco is not a sponsor or affiliate of its promotion.

Creditmycart.com does not show the same clear warning in the indexed page text that I reviewed.

This difference matters because Tesco branding can make an independent marketing offer look more official than it is.

The Button Leads Somewhere Else

The “Claim Vouchers” button does not take visitors to Tesco.

It points to trksy.org and then attempts to redirect through go.trksy.org using an affiliate identification number and offer number.

An affiliate link usually records which publisher sent a visitor to an advertiser.

The publisher may receive money when the visitor registers, installs an app, starts a trial, buys something, or completes another action.

This helps explain how an apparently free voucher promotion might make money.

The real product may be the flow of customer leads to several advertisers.

Your email address, phone number, survey answers, trial registrations, and app activity may therefore be more valuable to the operators than the first page suggests.

An affiliate redirect is not proof of fraud.

Many normal businesses use affiliate tracking.

However, a reward site should explain the tracking process, the companies receiving personal data, and the full conditions before asking someone to register.

The Reward Is Not Really Free

Users pay for this kind of offer with time, personal information, marketing consent, and sometimes money.

A survey may require many questions before it counts as complete.

An app offer may require installation, registration, continued use, or an in-app purchase.

A free trial may ask for card details and later become a paid subscription.

Citizens Advice has warned that people can be drawn into subscriptions through free trials or introductory deals and then struggle to leave them.

A person could spend money on several offers without reaching the highest voucher level.

Some deals may also be rejected if tracking fails, information does not match, or the advertiser decides that the requirements were not completed.

Creditmycart.com does not clearly show the expected total cost of reaching £750.

It does not state how many deals are required for each reward level.

It does not explain whether certain deals require purchases.

It does not explain what happens when an advertiser refuses to verify a task.

These missing details make the large headline difficult to judge.

Important Trust Information Is Missing

The indexed Creditmycart page is very small and mainly contains promotional text and one claim button.

I did not find a visible company address, named owner, customer-service email, telephone number, detailed privacy policy, full reward terms, or cancellation guide in that page text.

A trustworthy reward operator should make its legal identity easy to confirm.

It should explain who controls personal data.

It should list the exact actions required for every voucher level.

It should explain fees, subscription risks, rejected claims, payment times, and complaint procedures.

It should also provide a working support channel before a user begins an offer.

The lack of this information does not automatically prove dishonest activity.

It does mean the user carries more risk because there is no clear party to contact when something goes wrong.

The Domain Is Very New

A third-party website checker reports that creditmycart.com was registered on May 25, 2026.

That made the domain about one month old when reviewed in late June 2026.

The same checker gave it a trust score of zero and described it as likely unsafe, while also noting that it has a valid SSL certificate.

Automated trust scores can make mistakes, so this score should not be treated as final proof.

The domain age is still useful information.

A new website has had little time to build a record of successful payments, customer support, independent reviews, and responsible data handling.

A valid padlock only means the browser connection is encrypted.

It does not prove that the operator is honest or that the advertised reward will be delivered.

The Page Looks Like a Reused Marketing Template

Creditmycart.com and RewardLeap use nearly identical sections.

Both show a £750 Tesco reward, registration, sponsored deals, verification, and email delivery within 24 to 48 hours.

Both claim to connect consumer opinions with brands.

Both also send the claim button through the same trksy.org tracking domain.

This suggests that the page may be part of a wider affiliate campaign rather than a unique Tesco research community.

A reusable page can be legal.

However, it weakens the impression that “BasketBonus” is a well-established organisation with its own clear programme.

It also raises questions about who actually manages the reward after the visitor leaves creditmycart.com.

What a Careful User Should Do

Do not rely on the £750 headline without seeing the complete reward table.

Find the legal company name and confirm that the company is active.

Read every deal’s terms before submitting information.

Check the normal price after any free trial ends.

Record the cancellation deadline immediately.

Do not reuse an important password when creating an account.

Do not provide a Tesco password because an independent voucher promotion should not need it.

Do not provide bank login details, passport images, or other identity documents merely to release a voucher.

Keep screenshots of the offer, requirements, completion pages, receipts, and cancellation messages.

Use Tesco’s own website or app when checking genuine Clubcard vouchers and promotions.

Tesco advises customers not to follow suspicious links that request personal details and instead to access their accounts directly through Tesco.com.

What to Do After Entering Information

Cancel any trial that you do not want before it becomes a paid plan.

Check card and bank statements for unexpected charges.

Change any password that was also used on another account.

Be alert for marketing calls, messages, and emails that use the details you submitted.

Do not respond to later messages asking for a fee to unlock or deliver the voucher.

The UK National Cyber Security Centre advises people not to enter personal information on suspicious sites and provides a service for reporting questionable website addresses.

It also provides immediate guidance for people who have already shared passwords, bank details, or other sensitive information.

Final Assessment

Creditmycart.com appears to be an affiliate lead-generation funnel built around a large Tesco voucher headline.

It is not presented as a normal Tesco Clubcard service.

Its main button leaves the site and enters an outside tracking system.

Its conditions do not clearly show the real cost or work needed to reach £750.

Its public page lacks the legal and support information expected from a dependable reward company.

The near-copy found on another domain makes the “community” description feel more like marketing text than proof of an established organisation.

The offer is unverified and not worth giving sensitive information to unless the complete terms, operator, costs, and Tesco relationship can first be independently confirmed.