
Carter’s Military & Veteran Discount
Carter’s publishes no military or veteran discount percentage — the "20% military" offer is just the public signup deal. Here is what is actually verified and the real cheapest way to buy.
Does Carter’s offer a military discount? Based on Carter’s public site, Carter’s does not publish a percentage-based military or veteran discount on carters.com. Coupon sites list numbers ranging from "10%" to "75%," but none of them trace to Carter’s — and the popular "20% military" offer is really Carter’s standard email/text signup deal that anyone can get. Carter’s own pricing terms mention "special military discounts" only in the fine print (they cannot be combined with coupons), without stating an amount, who qualifies, or how to verify.
The one concrete military benefit we can confirm is free shipping on orders of $35 or more to APO/FPO addresses. For everyone else, the real savings at Carter’s are not a military percentage at all — they are the brand’s frequent 50–60% off sitewide sales, its Buy 1 Get 2 Free events, the 20% signup code, and Carter’s Rewards points, which usually beat any discount the aggregators invented.
This is an independent guide. NavyWeek is not affiliated with Carter’s or Carter’s, Inc.; Carter’s sets and can change its own terms at any time. We link straight to Carter’s official pages so you can confirm the current terms before you buy.


Opens www.carters.com · No military discount code to enter — Carter’s publishes no military percentage or verification path; the real savings are the public sitewide sales
Carter’s Military Discount — Key Facts
- Military discount percentage
- None published (terms reference non-combinable "special military discounts" with no stated amount)
- Verification
- Not ID.me (confirmed), not GovX; any mechanic would be direct with Carter’s (unverified)
- Eligible groups
- Not specified by Carter’s
- Confirmed military benefit
- Free shipping on $35+ orders to APO/FPO addresses
- Best total-savings path
- 50–60% sitewide sale or Buy 1 Get 2 Free + Rewards; 20% signup code if no sale; cashback only when no code is used
- Carter’s Rewards
- 1 pt/$1 (VIP 2 pt/$1 above $500/yr); 100 pts = $5; free to join
- Cashback (volatile)
- Rakuten 2% as of July 11, 2026 — rate fluctuates; often voids on coupon-code orders
- Sibling brand
- OshKosh B’gosh (same company) runs parallel sales
- Region
- United States
Source: Carter’s — Pricing & Promotions (references "special military discounts" as a non-combinable exclusion) · Last verified: July 11, 2026
The stack that beats the "military discount" Carter’s never published
Carter’s runs no military percentage, and the aggregator numbers are invented. Here is the honest stack that actually maximizes what a service member saves on a kids’ cart:
- Time it to a 50–60% sitewide sale — Carter’s runs these often, and on a $60 cart that is about $30 off, past any percentage the coupon sites made up.
- Buying 3+ pieces? Use Buy 1 Get 2 Free and add the highest-priced item first — frequently the deepest effective discount of all.
- Sign in to Carter’s Rewards every time — 1 pt/$1 (VIP 2 pt/$1), 100 pts = $5. It stacks on sales and codes alike, the one always-on layer.
- No sale live and you are a new subscriber? Take the public 20% email/text signup code — the same offer relabeled as a "military discount" elsewhere.
- Skip the code to keep cashback — a coupon order often voids Rakuten (2% as of July 2026); a no-code sitewide sale is portal-safe. Shipping to APO/FPO adds free shipping at $35+.
None of these is a military benefit, and Carter’s publishes no military percentage or verification path — but together they beat a Carter’s military discount that does not exist.
WHO QUALIFIES
Carter’s does not publish a percentage-based military or veteran discount, and the numbers coupon sites cite are unverified and contradict each other. The one confirmed military benefit is free shipping on $35+ orders to APO/FPO addresses. The real savings for service members are Carter’s frequent 50–60% sitewide sales, Buy 1 Get 2 Free events, the public 20% signup code, and Carter’s Rewards — no military percentage to enter at checkout.
- Carter’s publishes no eligibility criteria for a military discount — there is no confirmed group (active duty, veterans, spouses, or dependents) that qualifies for a set percentage at checkout or the register.
- The only benefit tied to military status is a shipping perk, not a price discount: orders of $35 or more shipped to APO/FPO military addresses ship free.
- Everyone — military or not — can use Carter’s public savings: frequent 50–60% sitewide sales, Buy 1 Get 2 Free events, a 20% email/text signup code for new subscribers, and Carter’s Rewards points.
| Audience | Discount |
|---|---|
| Military, veterans, spouses & dependents (percentage discount)Carter’s states no military discount percentage, eligibility list, or verification mechanic. Do not expect a set discount at checkout or the register. | None published |
| Orders shipped to APO/FPO military addressesThe one verifiable military benefit — a shipping perk on qualifying online orders to APO/FPO addresses, not a discount on the price of the items. | Free shipping on $35+ |
| Everyone (the real savings route)Carter’s runs deep 50–60% sitewide sales and Buy 1 Get 2 Free events often; a 20% signup code covers new subscribers when no better sale is live. These beat any percentage the aggregators invented. | Up to ~50–67% via public sales |
HOW TO REDEEM
Online at www.carters.com
- Shop a sitewide sale event (no military status needed)Carter’s runs 50–60% off sitewide frequently, plus Buy 1 Get 2 Free promotions on select styles. On a Buy 1 Get 2 Free trio, add the highest-priced item first for the deepest effective discount. This public sale price is the real savings — there is no military percentage to add on top.
- If nothing is on sale and you are a new subscriber, take the 20% signup codeSign up for Carter’s email and text for 20% off your first purchase. This is the same offer some coupon sites relabel as a "military discount" — it is the standard public signup deal, open to everyone, not a military-exclusive benefit.
- Sign in to Carter’s Rewards so you earn pointsCarter’s Rewards is free to join and earns 1 point per $1 (VIP members earn 2 points per $1 above $500 net annual spend); 100 points = $5. Points stack on every order regardless of sale or code — the one reliable always-on savings layer.
- Enter only one code — and skip it to keep cashbackCodes do not combine, so you pick one per order. To preserve a cashback portal (Rakuten was 2% as of July 11, 2026, a rate that fluctuates), do not enter a coupon code: a code order commonly voids cashback, while a sitewide sale with no code entered is portal-safe.
- Shipping to an APO/FPO address? Orders $35+ ship freeThe single confirmed military-specific benefit applies here: online orders of $35 or more to APO/FPO military addresses ship free. This is a shipping perk, not a price discount.
In store
- Do not count on a percentage at the registerCarter’s publishes no in-store military discount. Aggregator pages that claim an "in-store military discount with valid ID" cite no percentage that traces to Carter’s, so do not rely on a specific number at checkout.
- Bring your list to a sale event insteadThe dependable in-store savings are the same deep public sales that run online — 50–60% off sitewide and Buy 1 Get 2 Free. Cross-shop OshKosh B’gosh (same company) for the same kids’ basics on a parallel promo cadence.
HOW IT WORKS
The starting point is what Carter’s actually publishes. Its Pricing & Promotions terms reference "special military discounts" only inside a non-combinable exclusion — the same sentence that says coupons cannot stack with each other or with Grandparent Wednesdays. There is no stated percentage, no eligibility list (active duty, veterans, spouses, dependents), and no verification mechanic. Because the amount and the rules are undocumented, we do not assert any figure; anything beyond APO/FPO free shipping is unconfirmed.
The aggregator numbers are a cautionary tale. Coupon and deal sites advertise a Carter’s "military discount" at figures that contradict one another — "20%," "up to 85%," "10–25%," "75% in-store" — and none of them trace back to carters.com. The widely shared WeSalute "Carter’s Military Discount — 20% off" is, in its own words, 20% off when you sign up for email and texts: the standard public signup promo, not a military-exclusive benefit. One coupon site’s instruction to "verify through ID.me" is simply wrong — ID.me states directly that Carter’s does not use ID.me and that members would "verify their status directly with Carter’s."
So there is no confirmed verification path. Carter’s is not on ID.me (ID.me says so), not on GovX (the GovX "carter" listing is a different brand, Fifth and Ninth), and — based on available evidence — not on SheerID. Some shoppers report registering a military ID in a carters.com account and receiving an emailed single-use code, but that process is not documented anywhere on carters.com; treat it as unverified and confirm with Carter’s customer service before relying on it.
The honest good news is that a military percentage is not the best deal here anyway. Carter’s is a deep-discount brand: 50–60% off sitewide sales and Buy 1 Get 2 Free events run often, and on a $60 cart a live 50% sale takes you to about $30 — far past any percentage the aggregators invented. Layer Carter’s Rewards (1 point per $1, VIP 2 points per $1, 100 points = $5) on every order, add a 20% signup code when nothing better is live, and add a cashback portal only when you are not entering a code. If you are shipping to an APO/FPO address, you also get free shipping at $35+.
Exclusions & fine print
- No first-party Carter’s military or veteran discount percentage was found on carters.com — its terms reference "special military discounts" only as a non-combinable exclusion, with no stated amount, eligibility, or verification path.
- Coupon codes cannot be combined with each other, with Grandparent Wednesdays, or with "special military discounts" (Carter’s pricing terms). You pick one code per order.
- Codes are typically not valid on clearance, doorbusters, or Treasure Box items — the deepest markdowns are already final.
- Cashback portals (Rakuten, TopCashback) commonly reduce or void on coupon-code orders; a sitewide sale with no code entered is the portal-safe route.
- Coupon sites circulate contradictory Carter’s "military discount" percentages ("10–25%," "20%," "75–85%"). Carter’s publishes no such brand-run rate, so treat those numbers and "codes" with caution.
- Carter’s is not on ID.me (ID.me states this directly) and is not on GovX; the "GovX carter" listing is an unrelated brand, Fifth and Ninth.
SOURCES
- Carter’s — Pricing & Promotions (references "special military discounts" as a non-combinable exclusion) — Carter’s
- ID.me Shop — Does Carter’s Have Military Discounts? (confirms Carter’s does NOT use ID.me) — ID.me
- MilitaryBridge — Carter’s military discount (free shipping $35+ to APO/FPO) — MilitaryBridge
- MyMilitaryBenefits — Carter’s & OshKosh B’gosh military discount — MyMilitaryBenefits
- WeSalute — Carter’s "military" offer (really the public 20% email/text signup) — WeSalute
- Rakuten — Carter’s cashback (2% as of July 11, 2026; rate fluctuates) — Rakuten
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Does Carter’s offer a military discount?
How much is the Carter’s military discount?
Do veterans, spouses, or dependents get a Carter’s discount?
Does Carter’s use ID.me, GovX, SheerID, WeSalute, or VerifyPass?
How do I verify my military status with Carter’s?
What is actually the cheapest way for a service member to buy from Carter’s?
Can I combine a military discount with promo codes or sale items?
Does Carter’s offer a first responder, teacher, nurse, government, or student discount?
Does Carter’s run a Veterans Day or Memorial Day military sale?
MORE MILITARY DISCOUNTS
All military & veteran discountsEditorial policy
- Source priority. We cite Carter’s official pricing terms and the ID.me brand page first, and report plainly that no first-party Carter’s military or veteran discount percentage was found. Carter’s terms reference "special military discounts" only as a non-combinable exclusion with no stated amount, eligibility, or mechanic; ID.me states directly that Carter’s does not use ID.me, and Carter’s is not on GovX. We deliberately omit the unverified military-discount percentages circulating on coupon sites because Carter’s publishes no such brand-run rate. All facts are confirmed on the "Last verified" date above.
- Independence. NavyWeek.org is not affiliated with the U.S. Navy, the Department of Defense, NAVCO, or any federal agency. We do not accept payment to recommend specific recruiters, schools, vendors, or services.
- Review cadence. Because Carter’s can change these terms at any time, the offer is re-verified against the official page on a recurring basis and whenever a reader reports a change.
- Reviewer. The page is reviewed for accuracy by the reviewer named in the byline. The "Last reviewed" date at the top of the page reflects the most recent review pass.
- Corrections. Factual errors are corrected as soon as we can verify the issue against an official source. See the "Report an outdated fact" link below.
- Not advice. This page is informational only. For decisions about service, benefits, pay, or assignment, rely on official .mil sources and your chain of command, detailer, recruiter, or accredited representative.



































































































































































































































































































































































































































































