@puncharama@LidlGB Receipts have quietly become part of the shop admin now: price check, proof for gates, and backup if anything scans oddly. Annoying when you have bags in hand.
@DonnaBrough3@Morrisons No price label is the cue to scan before it reaches the till. New flavours are exactly where pack size and promo labels can lag behind the actual price.
If Sainsbury's own-brand eggs start looking whiter, the basket point is simple: shell colour is a shelf cue, not the value check.
Compare the pack price, unit price and how eggs affect the shop total beside the other supermarkets before paying.
https://t.co/igbWuQv9p7
May's 95-item supermarket basket is receipt-level money: Aldi £168.30, Lidl Plus £170.58, Asda £192.58, Tesco Clubcard £196.88 in the Which? May comparison.
That is the useful check: the actual shop in front of you, not the supermarket you usually default to.
https://t.co/9Q01sPqsar
Nearest or most common supermarket is not automatically best for the shop in front of you.
A one-point mystery-shop win is a reminder to separate store experience from basket maths: check the actual items, card prices and pack sizes before the till.
There are more Aldis in Chester than any other supermarket, and this week both discounters were included in a Super #Grocer33
None of them made the podium, however, with Tesco emerging victorious by just one point over Sainsbury’s
https://t.co/2ZTR2MFYdt
A barbecue shop is exactly where loyalty prices can move the result: meat, buns, drinks, sauces and extras all stack up differently by supermarket.
The useful check is whether the card price changes this basket before you pay, not who is cheapest in general.
Discounts for Lidl Plus users made all the difference in our Super #Grocer33 pricing survey
See the price difference when we compare the two biggest grocery discounters against the full-range supermarkets
https://t.co/XYCimjKyai
Same-day groceries sitting in the same basket as the rest of Amazon is a real checkout habit shift.
Convenience is useful, but the final check matters more: item price, perishables, delivery timing and substitutions all land in one total before you pay.
Amazon customers can now browse and buy fresh grocery items “alongside everything else”
Perishables and non-food able to be purchased within a single basket and delivered on the same day
https://t.co/8NCxi08lyD
@skippz666@asda Shelf price vs till price is exactly the one to catch before you pay. A quick photo of the label can save the awkward receipt-check shuffle.
Discounts for Lidl Plus users made all the difference in our Super #Grocer33 pricing survey
See the price difference when we compare the two biggest grocery discounters against the full-range supermarkets
https://t.co/XYCimjKyai
Beans are one of those cupboard bits where the pack size does a lot of work.
A quick CartCompare search today brings up Heinz 4 x 415g, 4 x 200g and snap pots alongside own-label beans, so it’s worth checking the actual size before checkout.
https://t.co/VTwx1vU6Io
Tea bags are a quiet unit-price one: 80/160/240 packs make the shelf sticker harder to judge.
CartCompare is showing Sainsbury's PG Tips x80, x160 and x240 today, with the larger pack lower on £/kg in the results.
Worth checking before the kettle stock-up:
https://t.co/aLEXHwzKMt
Household aisle note: kitchen roll is where "2 rolls" vs "3 rolls / 210 sheets" can make the shelf price feel less obvious. CartCompare is showing Plenty and Regina lines today, so it’s a good one to compare before checkout: https://t.co/ni4DlYAWGN
Friday fridge-door maths: spreadable butter is one of those buys where 400g vs 750g changes the shelf sticker pretty fast.
CartCompare is showing Anchor, Country Life and Lurpak deals today, so it’s worth checking the actual tub size before adding it.
https://t.co/ni4DlYAWGN
Friday shop note: rice, olive oil and instant coffee are exactly the boring bits that can swing a basket. CartCompare is showing grocery deals on them today, incl. Tesco/Sainsbury’s/Waitrose lines.
Quick compare before checkout: https://t.co/ni4DlYAWGN
@toneverlandwego ice lollies plus fruit can ambush a “just salad bits” shop. did the Clubcard prices take much off at checkout, or was £40 still the damage?
@pansexualflower did the shelf label show the unit price anywhere? with popcorn that’s the bit I’d check - the big price-match sign doesn’t tell you whether the pack or price actually moved
@Electrifyyy was that Woosh rather than a normal delivery slot? £4 on one meal deal is worth separating from the actual meal deal price - it’s the fee doing the damage there
@PeterMc_Dermott@Tesco which pack was it - own-brand chilled or Finest? same barcode + pappy texture sounds much more like a recipe/supplier switch than a shelf mix-up