Supermarket Prices September 2024 Analysis
Latest Deals
Hello Deal Hunters!
Using the Latest Deals supermarket price comparison tool, we track the online prices of the 20 most-commonly bought products at a range of supermarkets (the cheapest option of each product of the same size).
Here you can see the price changes at
Aldi
ASDA
Iceland
Morrisons
Sainsbury's
Tesco
Waitrose
Each month we will be sharing a review of the price changes we find. This may be helpful for Deal Hunters as it informs you as to which supermarket may be increasing prices the most.
Here it is for September 2024:
Zoomed in the last 3 months:
FAQs
What about Lidl, Co-Op, Savers, Poundland etc.?
We don't track these places at present. We may do in future.
What products do you track?
We don't want to say exactly what products for a variety of reasons, but it is a common basket of goods that form the 20 most bought products. We find the cheapest available option for the same size.
Iceland seems wrong, it's not that expensive
Iceland is a unique supermarket because it doesn't sell much of it's own brand goods. Basic items, such as those we tend to collect data on, tend to be more expensive at Iceland. Iceland does sell other items, such as large packs of frozen meat, at cheaper prices than other supermarkets - however we don't necessarily track all those product prices for the purposes of this.
How can I compare prices myself?
Use our free Supermarket Price Comparison tool on the Latest Deals app.
I always shop around. I don’t go to one specific supermarket each week, I go to several. I know it’s a bit more running about. But I save at least £60 a week doing this
PayItForward yeah we've been doing the same, went to farm foods for the first time this week, some good offers in there
I like different things from different places, so go to Sainsbury’s, Aldi and M&S . I always use the supermarket comparison for certain items to check best deal and what to plan to get when doing a list.
Meaningless comparison when its just 20 common items but they won't tell you what they are and which products they are comparing from each supermarket. Then you have the more limited selection at Aldi. This is just free advertising for Aldi but utterly useless information for the end consumer. I'm often surprised by the value of other supermarkets compared to Aldi because they have more promotional offers I can try, match Aldi prices often with higher quality versions and they have their own loyalty scheme plus typically I go to other supermarkets when I have a voucher to use. It is never wise to be loyal to any supermarket. I probably got to Aldi about once every 6 weeks and buy about ten to fifteen pounds of stuff.
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