A 10-watt LED bulb for 37 rupees. A Samsung 32-inch smart TV for under 13,000. Pampers diapers at nearly half the retail price. This is the kind of content that has kept Dealdost running since 2015 — and explains why it has grown into one of India's largest deal-sharing communities on Telegram, now boasting over 3.5 million subscribers.
The channel operates as a real-time deal aggregator focused entirely on the Indian e-commerce ecosystem, primarily pulling offers from Amazon India and Flipkart. Posts go up throughout the day — sometimes as frequently as 5 to 8 times in a single afternoon — covering everything from baby products and branded footwear to gold investments and home appliances. The range is genuinely broad: one hour you're looking at an 85% discount on Puma and Adidas shoes, the next there's a fintech app loot deal offering gold worth 21 rupees for just 1 rupee.
What Dealdost does well is speed. The word "FAST" appearing in posts is not decorative — many of these flash deals expire within hours or even minutes, and the channel's posting cadence reflects that urgency. The team clearly monitors price drops actively rather than recycling old listings. Bank-specific offers (ICICI, HSBC, Amazon Pay ICICI) are regularly highlighted, which adds genuine value for users who know how to stack discounts.
The format, however, is stripped to the bone. Most posts are just a price, a product name, and an affiliate link — occasionally with a brief note about coupon codes or card discounts. There are no product photos, no detailed descriptions, and minimal context for someone unfamiliar with a product. If you see "Loot ₹145" with a Flipkart link and nothing else, you're clicking blind. For a channel with this many followers, a bit more editorial effort would go a long way.
The affiliate disclosure is pinned and transparent, which is a mark of credibility that not all deal channels bother with. Operating since 2015 also gives Dealdost a track record that newer channels simply cannot match — longevity in this space suggests the deals are at least consistently real, even if not always the deepest cuts available.
This channel is best suited for bargain hunters who shop on Amazon and Flipkart regularly and want a passive feed of price alerts without doing the research themselves. It works particularly well for household essentials, electronics, and baby products. Power users who want curated, explained deals with product comparisons will find the no-frills style frustrating. But for the average Indian online shopper looking to stretch their budget, Dealdost remains a reliable, high-volume signal worth having in your feed.