Article created by: Ieva Pečiulytė

Life isn’t always black and white. There exist gray areas that are often ambiguous and can be exploited, for better or worse. However, if you can circumvent the rules to your benefit without harming anyone, you win. 

Take these people, for example. They are proudly patting themselves on the back after stumbling upon flaws in the system and taking advantage of them. Some received a free plate of fries for their efforts, while others were more fortunate and saved a significant amount of money in the process. 

If you have similar experiences, feel free to share them in the comments below. 

#1

Two men shaking hands over a signed contract, symbolizing successfully exploiting a loophole for mutual benefit. I got this nonsense job, something to do with running a country, anyhow the job comes with lots of perks, I get loads of free stuff like holidays, my house decorated, takeaways etc. All I have to do is tell my underlings to give contracts to my pals without any normal competitive checks and balances.

madboater1 , Amina Atar/unsplash Report

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    #2

    Young woman exploiting loophole benefits while talking on phone and using laptop in a cozy home setting. I wanted out of my mobile phone contract without paying so after researching areas where my mobile phone provider didn't have coverage, I called them and let them know that I was moving to that exact area. I refused to pay for a service they couldn't provide me with and BAM, I was out.

    premiumtrim , Getty Images/unsplash Report

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    #3

    Digital electricity meter showing energy consumption, illustrating how people found a loophole and reaped benefits exploiting it. My prepay electric meter freaked out after the pavement outside my house was dug up for some reason (nothing to do with me...was by open reach). Anyway, screen went blank and wouldn't load my credit. I called the provider and told them. They said we will send someone out to replace it. I said well it won't accept my credit, are you going to bill me? The guy said "we have no way of knowing what we are using so we can't bill you! We will get it fixed asap". Well a guy came out to replace it but they gave him the wrong meter so he couldn't replace it. He said he will have to get a new one and they would call and book a new appointment. I said "no rush as long as I still get free electricity!" And I haven't heard from them in nearly a year.

    That's how I'm getting free electricity. Not my fault, I did what I had to and notified the company. Company is actually about to go bust too.

    RudeRub2176 , hadi_sabi/reddit Report

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    #4

    Young boy focused on laptop screen while working indoors, illustrating people finding loopholes and reaping benefits online. One time in like, fifth grade, my English teacher gave us an online test that we were supposed to do by ourselves for homework. At the end of the test, you're supposed to enter your teacher's email so that they get the results. Long story short, I rushed through the test and put in my own email. I then got an email that told me all the correct answers. Then I used that email to retake the test and get 100%.

    Xurban , Getty Images/unsplash Report

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    #5

    Person with glasses writing notes in notebook at desk, symbolizing finding loopholes and reaping benefits effectively. My grade three teacher told me to fill up a page of text from "here" to "here" and she drew two dots on each corner of the page, so i wrote it diagonally across the page in big letters. she was having a hard time keeping a straight face when telling me off.

    Quilton , Getty Images/unsplash Report

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    #6

    Hand holding pencil filling in answer sheet bubbles, illustrating finding a loophole and exploiting it for benefits. It turns out that you don't have to take an AP course in order to take the AP test. And if you pass the test, it's worth college credit.

    So I signed up for the AP Psychology one, read the book and took the test earlier today. I think I just bypassed an entire year of class.

    I'm pretty happy right now.

    Ephemeral_Being , Nguyen Dang Hoang Nhu/unsplash Report

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    #7

    Old coin-operated electricity meter showing dials and instructions, illustrating a loophole exploited for benefits. Not a loophole as such, but a broken meter.
    I was a student down in Newquay in 2003.I lived in a flat that had a electric meter that took pound coins. It was an old meter with a little clock looking thing on it, you put the pound, turned a dial, and the hand on the clock moved a bit, put in another pound, turn the dial, hand moved a bit and so on. You could do this until the little hand went all the way round to full. A full meter lasted about a week, and cost about 20quid to fill. One day my flatmate discovered that if we put a pound in and just carried on turning the dial, it would fill up all the way.
    My mates kept complaining how cold their student houses and flats were, when me and my flatmate had a three bar fire on and were spending about 5 quid a week on leccy. We told the landlord, but he never came to fix it.

    brithefry , TechnicalyAnIdiot/reddit Report

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    #8

    Close-up of a laptop screen showing Gmail inbox interface, highlighting digital communication and loophole exploitation benefits. When you use your gmail address to sign up an account, you can place a full stop anywhere in the part before the “@“ and gmail will ignore it, so you can set up multiple accounts for things without having to create a new email, whilst still receiving any emails to the same address (useful if you need to validate the sign up). This works really well for stuff like fast food apps where you get a sign up bonus or a freebie.

    So, as an example, if my gmail address is janebloggs@googlemail.com I could get away with making new accounts under “Jane.bloggs”, “J.anebloggs” or “Janeb.loggs”.

    Etc etc. Gmail will ignore those full stops!

    I’ve used this method to set up multiple Costa accounts as you get a little something for setting up, and also I copy and paste the friend codes on to new accounts for another reward haha.

    EDIT: a couple of redditers have blown my mind and also said you can use a “+” in a similar way - it will also get ignored, so you could have

    Janebloggs+costa@googlemail.com
    Janebloggs+kfc@googlemail.com

    Great for keeping track of what you’re using for each app!

    machinehead332 , Stephen Phillips - Hostreviews.co.uk/unsplash Report

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    #9

    Hand inserting card into a machine, illustrating the concept of finding a loophole and exploiting it for benefits. I was heading to a Forrest for bike rides and parking was £9 all day. For some reason I thought it was a good idea to click the “I have a voucher” option, put in a random 7 digit code and it worked, had free parking about 10 times before they clicked on.

    BuildingInfinite , Getty Images/unsplash Report

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    #10

    Close-up of an e-reader displaying a passage, illustrating finding a loophole and reaping benefits from exploiting it. I had a kobo e-reader bought from WHSmith. It packed up after a little over 12 months. I took it back and after a little to and for (sale of goods act, etc.) the manager agreed to swap it for a new one. Thing is they had reduced by £20, and the only thing the system would let the assistant do was refund and re-sell.

    "Is cash OK?" he said. I agreed that it was, and he handed me a bag with a brand new kobo, and £20 cash.

    I thanked him, and walked smartly out.

    sihasihasi , Texas_Nerf_Herder/reddit Report

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    #11

    Subway sub club loyalty card filled with stamps showing a loophole exploited for free footlong sandwiches benefits. I used to buy rolls of Subway Stamps on eBay for like $100. I think you could get 125 footlongs with a roll. Really wish they didn't get rid of that program!

    lemayo , BirthdayBoyStabMan/reddit Report

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    #12

    Man explaining paperwork to woman in car, illustrating people finding a loophole and benefiting from exploiting it. I wanted to get a Mass state driver's license while still in college. Normally, you can't use a college address to establish residency since you're still considered a resident of your home state. Despite not being residents, Massachusetts will call out-of-state students for jury duty. In addition to the normal documents like a utility bill, the RMV accepts a jury duty summons as proof of residency. If you're unlucky enough to get called for jury duty in college, it worked like a charm!

    dbath , Getty Images/unsplash Report

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    #13

    Person holding a glass jar labeled savings filled with coins, illustrating benefits gained from exploiting a loophole. If you buy a day's worth of travel insurance through Compare the Market for ~£2, you get the year's 2for1 movies and meals which has saved me wayyy more than the £2!

    IndividualisticPie , Towfiqu barbhuiya/unsplash Report

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    #14

    Close-up of a hand holding a chocolate flavour flapjack bar, illustrating creative food packaging loopholes. The vending machine at my work has these unreal bakewell flapjacks, priced at £1.20. However if you use the option to pay by card for some reason some of the prices change, and the flapjacks change to 70p.

    I’ve not told anyone else and it’s a secret I will keep to my grave.

    Just to edit this, I’m don’t think they’re the ones in HomeBargains/B&M, they’re in a clear and pink packet with pink on the front, I *think* they might be Marywell brand or something similar.

    Edit 2: Did some Googling and they’re 100% ‘Marybake’ brand flapjacks. But no results on where to buy the Bakewell ones in bulk!

    WinstonwanlegIngram , Tac3022/reddit Report

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    #15

    Half-eaten pizza in a cardboard box showing how people found a loophole and reaped the benefits after exploiting it. I ordered a vegetarian pizza from big John's, for some reason it had tuna as an option. They never actually had any in so they would call and ask what I wanted instead so I would ask for chicken, pepperoni etc

    Got a meat topping for £5 less than I should every time.

    JudasBC , PM_me_dat_Poutine/reddit Report

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    #16

    Box of golden crispy fried chicken nuggets, illustrating a loophole exploited to enjoy extra food benefits. For years 10 McNuggests cost $3 and change but the 4 piece was a buck.

    Gameroomvids , AquaticSombrero/reddit Report

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    #17

    Young man focused on building a detailed ship model, illustrating creativity and skill often seen when people find loopholes. In my first project for my Principles of Engineering 3 class in high school, we had to create from a pool of common household items (paper, paper clips, rubber bands, balloons, straws, etc.) a semi-self-propelled toy boat kit and instructions for assembly, the premise being that it would be something to sell in a small vending machine or whatever. The scoring was based on the effectiveness of the boat times the ease of construction and coolness (as judged by the freshman engineering class) divided by the time it took to go 1 meter over water and the price (each item had some cost).

    Most of the people built elaborate floating straw monstrosities with rubber-band powered propellers. I examined the scoring and decided that if I could reduce the cost enough, the other stuff wouldn't matter that much, so I convinced my group to submit a design that consisted of:

    1 balloon
    1 paper clip
    1 straw
    1 piece of tape (to keep it somewhat together)

    The straw dragged in the water to keep it going relatively forward and to keep it from flying away. The freshmen gave us 5/5 for ease of construction, but we lost 50% of the score because our teacher said it didn't work; instead of going straight across the tub to the finish line, it veered off to the right, got caught on the wall, launched into the air, did a flip, landed in the water, and crossed the finish line.

    We ended up taking 1st place on the project by a huge margin. The next year that teacher implemented a minimum requirement for the number of items to use.

    Enlogen , Yunus Tuğ/unsplash Report

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    #18

    Man holding credit card in hand while using laptop, illustrating people finding loopholes and reaping benefits. Iceland has a savings card: for every £20 you put on the card they give you a £1 extra (which for all intents and purposes is better interest than a bank).
    So a few days before a shop buy a pack of sweets or something and slap £60-100 on the card (whatever your weekly shop amount is) then when you do your shop, you get some free money.

    greywind721 , Vitaly Gariev/unsplash Report

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    #19

    Woman using a contactless payment card at a modern store counter, showing a loophole benefit in customer transactions. Used to work for the NHS and just before I left, I renewed my Blue Light discount card. Got myself another two years worth of savings as a result.

    earlgreytoday , Blake Wisz/unsplash Report

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    #20

    Woman lifting weights at gym using a clever loophole technique to maximize benefits and improve workout results efficiently. Won a years free membership in one of the popular chain 24hr gyms in a fb competition when a new one opened near me. 3+ years later the code they gave me still works … :).

    selffulfilment , Danielle Cerullo/unsplash Report

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    #21

    Close-up of a modern espresso machine with steam wand, illustrating a clever loophole exploited for making coffee benefits. Disclaimer: I drink a **lot** of coffee.

    Went into John Lewis and bought their cheapest Coffee Maker (£11.99). Came with a years Warranty, as per.

    About 10 months later, it died (hot plate failed) so I return it, and they exchange it rather than give the money back.

    This one lasts 8 months before it just stops heating water entirely, go back, exchange it again.

    Third one made it to 11 months. Fourth one only managed 6. Fifth one finally gets over the one year mark.

    The really funny thing is that the cheeky buggers tried to sell me a 3 year warranty upgrade each time... at 3 times the price of the coffee maker.

    Vrakzi , Nathan Dumlao/unsplash Report

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    #22

    Old computer setup on a desk with keyboard, mouse, and CDs, illustrating people finding loopholes and benefits The original sin; using winRAR for free.

    anon , Alexander Mils/unsplash Report

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    #23

    Smiling woman using phone, relaxed on couch, representing people who found a loophole and reaped the benefits. Went to cancel now TV and they offered me another month for £1. Went to cancel again and they offered me two months for £2.99. it's not much but it's something?

    WesleyRiot , Vitaly Gariev/unsplash Report

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    #24

    Groceries with discount stickers showing a clever loophole exploited to reap benefits on marked-down food items. Not free but I discovered TooGood2Go long before it became trendy and the only local restaurant that was on it was Yo Sushi. I regularly got £100+ of sushi at the end of the night which I distributed to friends and family (and ate myself). This lasted for around a year and I think I was the only person using the app.

    Now loads of people know about it and there are far more restaurants on board. Still value as the likes of Greggs, you will get around a tenner's worth of goods for £2.59 (sandwiches, sausage rolls ect.) but the days where getting £100+ are over.

    For those that don't know 2G2G is an app where restaurants sell the stuff they normally throw out at the end of the night.

    Ovalman , joeChump/unsplash Report

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    #25

    Man focused on laptop, discovering loophole to benefit from it while working in a casual indoor setting. In the Marines, I went in when I was 25, so I already had college and was familiar with computers and the unit I was in was just getting their first personal computers. I got into the duty schedule for firewatch, and took myself and all my friends off for a whole year. If I didn't like someone, they got Friday and Saturday night duties. Nobody ever figured it out, and I changed it often.

    Later in my career, I used my skills for good. I wrote a series of macros that compiled several databases into one spreadsheet that my Staff Sergeant stole my work for and received his third NAM. They tried to give me office hours when I walked out of formation during his awards presentation. I did all that work during my lunch and my off hours. A program that is still in use today was based off of my spreadsheet.

    whittler , Kelum Chathuranga/unsplash Report

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    #26

    Close-up of crispy French fries in a white tray with ketchup in the background, illustrating a clever food loophole. I got fries at our local ski hill for nearly a quarter of the price by ordering a "paper plate with a side of fries" instead of just a regular plate of fries.

    TW80000 , Nik/unsplash Report

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    #27

    Person holding a remote control pointing at a smart TV screen, illustrating loophole exploitation benefits. I bought a tv, with staff discount, for £325,but it had a built in Dvd player that didn't work. I only needed it for 11 months, so after the 11 months I took it back, and was given the full price back, around £360. Basically got given £35 to enjoy a 37" flat screen for a year!

    Onlysilverworks , Glenn Carstens-Peters/unsplash Report

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    #28

    Receipt showing a buy one sandwich get one free offer, illustrating a loophole exploited for benefits. Endless £1.99 Big Macs. Just do the survey thing on your receipt, it takes 30 seconds and then use the code to get £1.99 Big Mac and chips.

    anon , UnitedObjective/reddit Report

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    #29

    Skiers on chairlifts and people enjoying a snowy mountain resort, showcasing benefits of finding loopholes. Our ski hill offers season passes for around 350 bucks but only 150 if it was your first year buying one, the best part was they never asked for an ID they just looked up your name to see if it was used before. I have had 8 different names now.

    Ewest39 , Joan Oger/unsplash Report

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    #30

    YouTube premium. The Indian version apparently costs £2 but I couldn’t get that to work, so mine is UAE version for £5. Yes it’s worth it to have no adverts on my TV.

    EmFan1999 Report

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    #31

    Not a loop hole as such, the guy who lived in my house before me has a nat geo subscription, it’s been months and he still hasn’t changed it to his new address. We’ve told him multiple times, just got the new one a couple days ago. I’ve not opened any of them but pretty tempted!

    3amcheeseburger Report

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    #32

    Tiles. Every couple of months I would order large floor or wall tiles via the free sample or £1 sample offer. I use them to cover my coffee table (needed 2 large floor tiles) and table surfaces. Husband hates coasters and just puts his tea cup anywhere. I have also added rubber feet and made trivets (hexagonal tile) for gifts for people.

    1stviplette Report

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    #33

    Worked on the student magazine in the 90s. Magazine was sponsored by the local Spoons, with a voucher for a free meal and a pint. Had access to the stock of magazines. Didn't buy any food that term.

    Direct-Reputation-94 Report

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    #34

    My electicity meter was broken for nearly a year.

    I informed my supplier about it but they didn't seem too interested. So I kept jest sending in the meter readings (the same number every month), as asked... and getting tiny electricity bills.

    Even after I moved house I queried the final bill reminding them that the meter was still broken. I gave them every chance but they assured me the bill was correct.

    They're one of the small ones that went out of business recently. (Not my fault, honestly!).

    fionasapphire Report

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    #35

    Coke vending machine in a hallway, illustrating a loophole exploited for benefits in an everyday setting. For me it was abusing the coke machines that had the weird elevator/treadmill inside of it, if you bought a coke and forced the door closed you could get the machine to refund your money then walk away with whatever you dispensed for free. Over the course of two semesters I probably did this about 4-5 times a day for 8 months.


    Hiddenshadows57 , Aranami/flickr Report

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