Take 5 Coupons in 2026: The National Discounts vs. the Better Local-Page Deals

Last updated: June 20, 2026  |  By: Jake Morrison

June 2026 update: national and local-page offer amounts re-checked across several states.

Take 5 coupons by offer type 2026 — economy oil change $5 off and premium oil change $7 off on the national offers page, Core/Complete/Ultimate credit $15 and Premium/Advanced Synthetic 25% off found only on local location pages, military and veterans 25% off oil changes, rideshare drivers 15% off any service

Take 5’s national offers page shows $5 off an economy oil change and $7 off premium: fine numbers, but not the best the chain runs. The real savings sit one click deeper, on each location’s own store page: a $15 credit toward the Core, Complete, or Ultimate service, or 25% off Premium and Advanced Synthetic oil changes. On top of either, military and veterans get a flat 25% off oil changes, and rideshare drivers get 15% off any service, both checkable at the national or local level.

My Ranger runs conventional oil (fifteen years, no complaints, no reason to switch), so a synthetic discount doesn’t do much for me personally. But I drove it through Georgia last fall and decided to actually test Take 5’s coupon structure instead of just repeating what the corporate page claims. The national offers page showed the standard $5 off economy change. I almost stopped there. Then I pulled up the specific Take 5 near where I was staying, outside Marietta, and its store page was running a flat 25% off any synthetic service, a number that doesn’t exist anywhere on the homepage. My truck didn’t qualify, but the gap between those two numbers told me everything about how this chain’s coupons actually work: corporate publishes the floor, and the local store publishes the ceiling.

Current Take 5 Coupons by Offer Type

Offer Amount Where it lives
Economy oil change discount $5 off National offers page
Premium oil change discount $7 off National offers page
Core/Complete/Ultimate Oil Change credit $15 toward Local location pages only
Premium or Advanced Synthetic discount 25% off Local location pages only
Military and veterans 25% off National and local pages, oil changes
Rideshare drivers 15% off National and local pages, any service

Offer amounts sampled from Take 5’s national offers page and several local-store pages across multiple states, June 2026. Local availability and exact terms vary by location and may require text or email enrollment.

No active official offer was found. Check local store pages or use the main savings guide on this page.

Why the National Page Doesn’t Show the Best Deal

Take 5 isn’t hiding anything shady. It’s just structured the same way Midas and Meineke are, where the corporate site sets a baseline and each location layers its own current promotion on top. The $5–$7 national numbers are real and guaranteed almost everywhere. The $15 credit and 25% synthetic discount are real too, but only at locations currently running them, which is most of the time in my experience checking stores across a handful of states, though not a guarantee. The only way to know your specific number is to look up your specific store.

National $5–$7 Discounts — best for: a guaranteed floor, no searching required

If you don’t have time to check a local page, the national offers page still gets you something. It’s not the best Take 5 coupon out there, but it’s the one you can count on at almost any location without doing extra homework.

Local-Page $15 Credit and 25% Synthetic Discount — best for: anyone willing to spend two extra minutes online

This is where the real money is. A 25% discount on a full synthetic service that runs $70–$95 is $17.50–$23.75 off, three to four times the national premium-tier discount. The catch is that it only shows up once you click through to your specific store’s page, and not every location runs it at every moment. Worth checking before every single visit, not just the first one.

Military and Veteran 25% Discount — best for: the single best per-visit number in the system

A flat 25% off oil changes, applied for military and veterans, is the strongest standing discount Take 5 runs. On a $90 full synthetic change, that’s $22.50 off, more than the $15 local credit and more reliable than waiting to see whether the synthetic promo happens to be live at your store that day.

Rideshare 15% Discount — best for: drivers changing oil every 5,000 to 7,000 miles

One oil change a year, 15% off doesn’t move the needle much. For rideshare and delivery drivers doing this three or four times a year because of the mileage, that discount adds up to real money over twelve months, and it’s one of the few coupons on this site built specifically around how often someone drives for work, not just what they drive.

Insider Tip

Go to take5.com, use the locator to find your nearest store, and click through to that specific location’s page, not the generic “Oil Change” service page. The local-only offers live there, usually toward the bottom. Most coupons also require signing up for Take 5’s text or email alerts before they apply, which takes about 30 seconds and can be done from the parking lot if you forget ahead of time.

What Most Drivers Get Wrong About Take 5 Coupons

People check the national offers page, see $5 or $7 off, and assume that’s the whole menu. It isn’t. It’s the floor. The stronger offers live one click deeper, on the page for your actual store, and plenty of drivers never go looking for them. The second mistake is assuming the military, rideshare, and synthetic discounts all stack together. Take 5 doesn’t publish a clear combinability policy on either its national or local pages, so don’t assume you can layer a 25% military discount on top of a local synthetic promo. Ask the specific store before you book if you’re trying to combine more than one offer. It’s a 30-second phone call that avoids an awkward conversation at checkout.

Jake’s Take

The national $5–$7 numbers are fine, but they’re not why Take 5 is worth a look. The 25% local synthetic discount and the 25% military rate are real standouts, especially against chains that bury similar savings behind a mail-in rebate. If you qualify for military, veteran, or rideshare pricing, that’s your best move every single time: check it before anything else on this page. If you don’t, spend the extra two minutes finding your specific store page before assuming the national offer is all there is.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Take 5 have coupons?

Yes, several kinds running at once. The national offers page typically shows $5 off an economy oil change and $7 off premium. Local store pages often run stronger offers on top of that — a $15 credit toward Core, Complete, or Ultimate service, or 25% off Premium and Advanced Synthetic. Military and veteran drivers get a flat 25% off oil changes, and rideshare drivers get 15% off any service, both at most locations. Most of these require signing up for text or email alerts before they apply.

What’s the best Take 5 coupon right now?

For most drivers without a military or rideshare qualification, it’s the local-page 25% off Premium or Advanced Synthetic — on a $90 full synthetic change, that’s $22.50 off, well ahead of the $7 national premium discount. If you do qualify for the military or veteran rate, that 25% off oil changes is usually the better number since it’s more consistently available than a rotating local synthetic promo. Check both your local store page and your eligibility before booking.

Does Take 5 offer a military discount?

Yes — 25% off oil changes for military members and veterans, listed on both the national offers page and most local location pages. It’s one of the more generous flat discounts among the chains covered on this site, and it applies regardless of which oil tier you choose.

Do Take 5 coupons require signing up for texts or email?

Most of them do. The offer terms on Take 5’s pages typically require enrolling in text or email marketing before a coupon activates at checkout. You can usually sign up from your phone in the parking lot right before your visit, but doing it a day ahead avoids any chance of a holdup at the register.

Do you need an appointment to use a Take 5 coupon?

No. Take 5 operates as a walk-in, stay-in-your-car service, and coupons apply the same way whether you planned the visit or just pulled in.

Does Take 5 service diesel trucks?

Most locations don’t. The quick-lube drive-through model isn’t built for diesel-specific oil specs, filter types, or the higher oil volumes diesel engines need. Call your specific store first if you’re driving a diesel pickup or van — chances are good they’ll send you to a diesel-capable shop instead.

How do Take 5’s coupons compare to Valvoline’s?

Both run on a similar idea — check the local page, not just the national one — but they structure it differently. Take 5 splits its discounts across national flat-dollar offers, local-page credits and percentages, and separate military/rideshare rates. Valvoline keeps it simpler: one local-page instant discount, typically $10–$15 off depending on oil type, with no separate military or rideshare tier published. For the full rundown on Valvoline’s side, see the Valvoline coupons guide, or the head-to-head Take 5 vs Valvoline oil change price comparison.

Sources

Coupon amounts verified against Take 5’s official offers page and multiple local location pages, June 2026. Local terms and current promotions vary by store, so confirm the live offer at your nearest location before booking.

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Jake Morrison — automotive service pricing writer

About the Author

Jake Morrison

Jake spent three years working the pit at a Jiffy Lube in Garland, Texas before switching to full-time automotive writing in 2007. His 2009 Ford Ranger still runs conventional oil, which is the only reason he noticed Take 5’s local-page synthetic discount didn’t apply to him on a recent road trip through Georgia, and why he started checking store pages instead of trusting the homepage.