1. Local cafés, stores, restaurants and supermarkets often have excess food at the end of the day, which you can prevent from going to waste by joining YourLocal and at the same time cashing in on great offers.
2. YourLocal is a great way to discover the local delicatessens and stores near you, taking an active part in reducing food waste and contributing to a sustainable community.
3. With YourLocal you can make a list of your favourite shops and restaurants and receive notifications when they post deals on their excess food.
4. Get up to 70% off, while supporting your local community.
5. YourLocal was founded with the help of volunteers and is now operating in Copenhagen, Denmark and New York, USA.
1. What not to love when you can get great deals while at the same time help local businesses reduce food waste! Also nice way to map out businesses around you who care about community and environment.
2. You open the map, and find mostly end of day offers from participating establishments, and can choose based on location and offerings They are all at a good discount, with a variety of different types of foods available.Great app, already recommending it to loads of friends.
3. No area for consumers, only allows businesses to sign up (yet a second process).It'd be great if it worked and was advertised.
4. After a few restarts it sometimes stays open long enough to rescue something.It's a great service and a good cause.
5. I thought this was great when I ran upon it on Instagram, but I haven't found a single place within Colorado that actually offers anything.
6. Major waste of time and bandwidth to download.App crashes all the time Love the concept.
7. Meanwhile ill use it much as I can to help rescue the food available there already.Only seems to be in Brooklyn.
8. I can't decide if knowing good food won't be wasted is the icing on the cake, or the cake itself.
9. I get that our Local is not available everywhere but I bet the more people download the more they'll expand.
10. Nothing showed in San Antonio, Atlanta or Los Angeles, then I read their story and they say they span from Copenhagen to Brooklyn.
11. I think this app's main problem is that not that many people know about it so ultimately it's just contributing to the problem it's trying to solve.