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Polo Spearmints - 34g

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Original price $2.99
Original price $2.99 - Original price $2.99
Original price $2.99
Current price $1.79
$1.79 - $1.79
Current price $1.79

About our best-before dates

We work hard to bring proper British groceries to Canada, but importing food across an ocean is not as tidy as stocking a supermarket shelf down the road.

Some products arrive with long dates. Some arrive with shorter ones. Different products come through the import process with different shelf lives, so the dates are not always as neat or predictable as they would be in a regular Canadian supermarket.

Most online grocery shops do not show best-before dates unless something is getting close. We do it differently.

If you were shopping in our Halifax store, you could pick up the product, turn it over, and check the date before buying. We think our online customers should get that same level of transparency.

That is why we show best-before dates clearly on our products.

What "best before" actually means

A best-before date is about quality — flavour, texture, freshness, and how the product is expected to be at its best.

It is not the same as a "use by" or expiry date, which only appears on certain regulated foods.

For everyday groceries like chocolate, biscuits, crisps, sweets, tea, sauces, jams, and pantry items, the best-before date is a quality marker, not a safety marker.

Why our dates vary so much

British imports are unpredictable. We do not get to choose every date that arrives in Canada, and different products naturally come with different shelf lives.

A jar of sauce may have months or years on it. A bag of crisps might arrive with a much shorter window and still be completely normal for that type of product.

We check dates, show them clearly, and give you the information before you buy — because that is how it should be.

What the colours mean

  • More than 30 days remaining
  • Within 30 days
  • Within 5 days, or past the best-before date

The product page will still show the actual date, so you can decide what works for you.

Why some customers like shorter dates

Many of our regular customers deliberately shop shorter-dated items when the price makes sense.

A chocolate bar with two weeks left is often every bit as good as one with six months left — and if we can pass on a saving instead of letting perfectly good food go to waste, everyone wins.

It is not about cutting corners. It is about being clear, fair, and sensible with stock that has travelled a long way to get here.

Questions about a specific product? Email help@thegreatbritishshop.ca — we read every message.

Availability:
In stock — ships from Canada
Rated 4.9/5 from 427 reviews
 
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Rated 4.9/5 from 427 reviews
About Polo Spearmints

About Polo Spearmints

There are few British sweets quite as specific as a Polo. Not a mint, exactly, not a sweet, exactly, but that particular white ring with the hole in the middle that has been rattling around in coat pockets and handbags since most people can remember. Polo Spearmints are the slightly softer, slightly sweeter version of that very familiar thing, and they are here in Canada without any suitcase required.

This is the standard 34g single tube, the same format you would have found on any newsagent counter or beside the till at a petrol station. The spearmint variety has a gentler, rounder flavour than the original mint, which makes it the one a fair number of people quietly preferred all along but perhaps never said out loud.

For British expats in Canada, Polo is one of those products that turns up reliably in a care package and disappears just as reliably within the hour. The Great British Shop stocks the UK-imported version, so there is no need to wait on a parcel from home or hope someone remembers to bring a few tubes over.

Rowntree's Polo Spearmints are made in the United Kingdom, and this is the same product sold in British shops, not a reformulated or regional version. If spearmint is your preference, this is the tube you want.

Shop more Rowntree's in Canada or browse the full range of British sweets available to ship across Canada.

Ingredients, Nutrition & Storage

Ingredients

Sugar, Glucose Syrup, Modified Starch, Anti-Caking Agent (Stearic Acid), Mint Oils

Storage

Store cool and dry.

More about Polo Spearmints

Polo Spearmints sit within a specific corner of the British confectionery world: the hard-pressed mint tube, small enough to slip into a pocket, designed to be shared one ring at a time. The Polo range, made in York by Rowntree's, covers several varieties, but the spearmint version has always attracted a slightly different crowd from the original, drawn to its rounder, less sharp flavour profile.

For Canadians who grew up in the UK, or who have family there, this is exactly the kind of small thing that is genuinely hard to replicate locally. The format, the texture, the particular spearmint note: it belongs to a specific British memory rather than a general mint category, which is why people search for it by name rather than settling for something similar.

The 34g tube is the standard single-serve size, light enough to tuck into a bag or desk drawer, and it stores without any fuss in a cool, dry spot. There is no refrigeration needed and no best-before anxiety if you are buying a few at once.

Polo Spearmints sit comfortably alongside the broader Rowntree's range, which includes other familiar British sweets well worth exploring. If you are building out a wider British sweet selection, the British sweets collection covers considerably more ground.

Orders ship from within Canada, so whether you are in Guelph or Kitchener-Waterloo, there is no overseas parcel wait involved. A small tube, a familiar taste, sorted.

Additional Information

Packaging Accuracy. We keep product information as accurate and up to date as possible. Manufacturers sometimes change packaging, ingredients, nutritional information, allergen advice, pack sizes or branding without notice, so the product you receive may look slightly different from the images shown. If you have a question about ingredients or allergens before ordering, please get in touch and we will gladly check for you.

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Loved by thousands of Canadians coast to coast.

What our customers say

4.9 from 427 Google Reviews
I work close-by in Bayer’s Lake and love to pop in for a healthy and delicious lunch when I don’t bring one from home! I’ve had over 10 flavours of the pies, and tried almost every sweet they make. I adore this place, from the amazing food, to the nostalgic candies and British goods they carry, and especially the wonderful staff who always greet me by name and ask how Im doing every time I come in. My Papa was born and raised in England and loved to share tastes of home with his whole family, I wish he was able to see this place, he would’ve been delighted ❤️❤️❤️
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The story of Polo Spearmints

The little mint with a hole and a long memory

Polo Spearmints are one of those sweets that barely need explaining to anyone from Britain. A small roll, a clean spearmint snap, and that famous hole in the middle doing a surprising amount of emotional work. They belong to the same mental shelf as bus tickets, school blazer pockets, glove compartments, handbags with receipts from three governments ago, and the emergency mint offered by someone’s gran at exactly the right moment.

Read the full story

What we can honestly say about the packet

There is no product-level origin data supplied here for Polo Spearmints, so this is not the place to pretend we have a neat little birth certificate for this particular roll. Grocery history loves a tidy story, preferably with a founder pointing at a kettle and inventing the future. Real confectionery history is usually messier. What we can say is that the modern Polo packet sits in the Rowntree’s family, and Rowntree’s is one of the big old names in British sweets, especially for the sort of confectionery that lived near the till and somehow ended up in every coat pocket in the country.

Rowntree’s, before the corporate filing cabinets arrived

For this packet, the later Rowntree story matters because it helps explain why the name still turns up on familiar British sweets. In 1981, Rowntree’s received the Queen’s Award for Enterprise for its contribution to international trade. By the time Nestlé acquired Rowntree’s in 1988, the company was described as the fourth-largest confectionery manufacturer in the world. Nestlé purchased Rowntree Mackintosh Confectionery that year for $4.5 billion. That is the sort of number that makes a mint roll look very modest indeed, though perhaps the mint roll had the better sense of humour.

York, Quakers, and the serious business of sweets

The older Rowntree story begins in York in 1862, when Henry Isaac Rowntree, a Quaker, bought the chocolate, cocoa-making and chicory parts of the Tuke family business at Castlegate. He started with a small operation, employing around a dozen people, and later moved production to a converted iron foundry at Tanner’s Moat. His brother Joseph Rowntree became a full partner in 1869, and after Henry Isaac’s death Joseph built the firm into a much larger manufacturer. Rowntree’s became part of the same broad British confectionery world as Cadbury and Fry, all shaped by Quaker ownership and a rather serious approach to making sweets properly.

From family firm to familiar national habit

Rowntree’s grew quickly in the late nineteenth century, helped by products such as Fruit Pastilles and Fruit Gums, which gave the company a strong place in British sweet shops long before modern supermarket aisles came along. The firm expanded to the Haxby Road site in York in 1890, and over time the Rowntree name became tied to everyday British confectionery rather than just special-occasion chocolate. Later, the 1969 merger with John Mackintosh and Sons created Rowntree Mackintosh, bringing together several household names under one roof. Corporate reshuffling rarely improves a story, but it does explain why old British sweet brands often arrive with more family branches than anyone asked for.

Why Polo still feels so British

Polo Spearmints are not grand or sentimental in an obvious way. They are not a Christmas tin, a birthday box, or something wrapped in gold foil and guarded by an aunt. They are more useful than that. They are the mint you bought from the newsagent, the one rattling in a car door, the one offered after fish and chips, coffee, or a train sandwich that should perhaps have remained uneaten. For British expats in Canada, that small roll can be oddly specific. It is not just mint flavour. It is queueing, pockets, corner shops, and somebody saying, “Do you want one?” while already pushing the packet towards you.

A quiet roll of home

That is the charm of Polo Spearmints. They do not need ceremony. They just sit there in the 34g roll, neat and familiar, doing the job British sweets often do best: reminding you of ordinary places you did not realise you missed. In Halifax, Nova Scotia, The Great British Shop keeps that sort of memory within reach, because sometimes the taste of home is not dramatic at all. Sometimes it is simply a spearmint with a hole in it.