Students Can Get Versatile Bell+Howell Rice Robot for Just $24 Shipped from QVC

The Bell+Howell Rice Robot, a compact 4-cup rice cooker, is down to just $24 shipped on QVC today, July 18 — but only for one day. USA Today reports that QVC is running a site-wide free shipping event, and new customers can stack a $15 discount using promo code HELLO15 on orders of $35 or more, bringing the $39 cooker to exactly $24.
The deal is aimed squarely at college students heading back to campus this fall. The Rice Robot weighs just 2.8 pounds and holds up to 1.2 liters — enough to cook rice, steam vegetables, or make oatmeal in a dorm room. No code is needed for free shipping. The $15 off coupon, HELLO15, does the rest.
The Rice Robot normally sells for $39.00 on QVC. Today, QVC is waiving all shipping fees site-wide — a promotion the company runs just a few times a year. New customers get an extra $15 off any first purchase of $35 or more with the code HELLO15. Stack both deals and the final price drops to $24.00 shipped, according to SC Times.
No other discounts or codes are needed for the free shipping side of the deal. The $15 coupon is for first-time QVC buyers only. The promotion runs only on July 18, so the window to grab this price is tight.
The Rice Robot is a one-touch cooker. You measure ingredients with the included color-coded cups, press a single button, and the machine switches to "Keep Warm" mode when the liquid is gone. It can cook white rice, brown rice, oatmeal, quinoa, and noodles. It also steams vegetables using a tray that comes in the box, according to News-Leader.
The inner pot is ceramic and free of PFAS — chemicals found in some older nonstick coatings. Each unit ships with a 60-recipe booklet developed by a celebrity chef. At 2.8 pounds, it fits on a small desk and is light enough to pack into an RV or a car headed to campus, Florida Today noted.
Not everything about the Rice Robot is clean. In September 2025, the UK's Office for Product Safety and Standards flagged early batches of the device as a fire hazard. Regulators found that the thermal fuse — the part that stops the cooker from overheating — was not touching the heating bowl. That made it useless. UK border officials rejected shipments, and by December 2025, formal recall alerts went out across Britain.
The recalled model carried barcode 080313025242. Safety experts say buyers should check that any unit purchased today displays an ETL listing mark on its base, which signals it passed North American safety tests. Users should also avoid leaving the device in Keep Warm mode for more than three hours.
Campus dining is getting more expensive. Many schools ban open-coil hot plates and toaster ovens in dorms due to fire risk. That leaves students with few ways to cook their own food. Compact, enclosed cookers like the Rice Robot slip through those rules because they use sealed, automated heating elements, according to Lohud.
Competing models from Dash and Aroma sell for $30 to $50. At $24 shipped, the Rice Robot undercuts all of them for one day. Students who skip even a few cafeteria meals per week can save hundreds of dollars a semester. That math is driving the viral attention this deal is getting on TikTok and YouTube right now.
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