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Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 11260787)
And then of course there's
(d)paying $1.49 a lb for seedless grapes instead of $3+; $3.49 for steak rather than $6.49; a doz oranges for $4.99 instead of $6.99; $3.98 for cracker barrel cheese rather than $7.99; Chickens for $1.49-$1.99 a lb instead of $2.99-$3.49; Bread for $2 or less instead of $3+ etc etc Haven't got oranges to compare but the strawberries I quoted in the other thread were way cheaper in Canada. $3.88 for 900g and the cheapest ones I can find on Tesco.com work out to $7.29 for the same amount. And I already compared orange juice. A pack of three cucumbers from Loblaw's is $2.28 and the equivalent from Tesco.com works out to $2.72 |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by JamesM
(Post 11259086)
Mixed bag of results.
Loblaw's charge more in Toronto than they do outside of the city. It will be $2 to the pound again soon. |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by Jsmth321
(Post 11260542)
I don't need to compare what Super Store prices are, nearest one is over an hour away so no point in checking prices there since its not feasible to go there to shop.
We have 3 choices Save On Foods (generally best prices and selection) Nestors (owned by the same company as Save on) smaller, but still okay price wise, and Extra Foods (brand owned by Loblaws but its a franchised chain) but the selection is poor there, and prices on par with Save On for most things. When I did live in an area with a Super Store, I found their prices to be basically on par with Save On, only a few cent difference on most things not on sale, and only way their price comparison worked to save money was if you bought No name, national brands were no cheaper. Just as a quick example the same brand name pasta sauce can be bought in all 3. Walmart is always $3.77 but sometimes on offer, Superstores is usually $3.95 but was on offer at $2 last week, Save on want a whopping $4.99 for the exact same product and to add insult to injury any discounted prices shown are only for club card holders something that doesn't occur at the other 2, the price is the price for every shopper. I don't shop in Safeway enough to make any comparison with that store. |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by Steve_
(Post 11260830)
Source? I said bread and cheese were more expensive here. I've got back bacon down as more expensive as well, although the regular awful bacon at Loblaw's is $3.98 (for 375g) and at Tesco their back bacon (250g) is $3.70. I've got chicken wings for $7.40 at Tesco and $8.77 at Loblaw's for the same amount.
Haven't got oranges to compare but the strawberries I quoted in the other thread were way cheaper in Canada. $3.88 for 900g and the cheapest ones I can find on Tesco.com work out to $7.29 for the same amount. And I already compared orange juice. A pack of three cucumbers from Loblaw's is $2.28 and the equivalent from Tesco.com works out to $2.72 |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by Steve_
(Post 11260830)
Source?
They are, of course, special offer prices and one could argue a fairer comparison would be with the offer prices in the UK. It's just that the UK doesn't seem to do so many different things for so much less than their normal prices. And the Canadian special offer prices seem to come around so often as to actually be more the norm. Those lower prices I mentioned are what I typically pay. |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by printer
(Post 11260905)
We have Superstore, Walmart, Safeway and Save on. If i am not on a budget then Save on has nice stuff but is way overpriced in comparison to Walmart.
Just as a quick example the same brand name pasta sauce can be bought in all 3. Walmart is always $3.77 but sometimes on offer, Superstores is usually $3.95 but was on offer at $2 last week, Save on want a whopping $4.99 for the exact same product and to add insult to injury any discounted prices shown are only for club card holders something that doesn't occur at the other 2, the price is the price for every shopper. I don't shop in Safeway enough to make any comparison with that store. Save On for this town is the cheapest, but as I said we only have 3 options for groceries, and 2 of the 3 are owned by the same company, and the 3rd is a Loblaws owned brand but a franchised location and the selection and pricing is poor. |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by BristolUK
(Post 11261025)
The flyers.
They are, of course, special offer prices and one could argue a fairer comparison would be with the offer prices in the UK. It's just that the UK doesn't seem to do so many different things for so much less than their normal prices. And the Canadian special offer prices seem to come around so often as to actually be more the norm. Those lower prices I mentioned are what I typically pay. And in a similar way they tend to come round on an almost regular baisis.. a good example that we take advantage of in sainsbury has been legs of Lamb at 1/3 normal price, comes around about 1 week in 4... |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by Steve_
(Post 11260830)
Source? I said bread and cheese were more expensive here. I've got back bacon down as more expensive as well, although the regular awful bacon at Loblaw's is $3.98 (for 375g) and at Tesco their back bacon (250g) is $3.70. I've got chicken wings for $7.40 at Tesco and $8.77 at Loblaw's for the same amount.
Haven't got oranges to compare but the strawberries I quoted in the other thread were way cheaper in Canada. $3.88 for 900g and the cheapest ones I can find on Tesco.com work out to $7.29 for the same amount. And I already compared orange juice. A pack of three cucumbers from Loblaw's is $2.28 and the equivalent from Tesco.com works out to $2.72 My wholemeal loaf is 45p, which converts to $0.81 and it's bigger (800g) than the price you've given above, because I buy the 'value' one rather than the Tesco's standard loaf. Bottom line is that I spent around £80 a week feeding my family of 4 plus several pets, and we eat very well for that (everything is fresh, no ready meals, lots of lovely cheeses/continental meats/salads etc), plus it includes alcohol. I could never have done that in Canada, so for me personally groceries would be much more expensive, but obviously every family eats and shops differently. |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by christmasoompa
(Post 11261354)
Bottom line is that I spent around £80 a week feeding my family of 4 plus several pets, and we eat very well for that (everything is fresh, no ready meals, lots of lovely cheeses/continental meats/salads etc), plus it includes alcohol.
I could never have done that in Canada, so for me personally groceries would be much more expensive, but obviously every family eats and shops differently. Meal sizes haven’t changed, but more variety in the diet and we eat lamb much more than we used too, we have a roast dinner most weekends, we have greater selection of cheese, much better selection of breads, (and for some bizarre reason I have a mountain of chocolate) |
Re: Price comparison
You will drive yourself crazy comparing prices all the time, personally I found I spend less on groceries in Canada. Our eating habits have changed however, we never eat lamb anymore because it's so expensive, we also don't by any premade food only raw foods, we bake our own bread and we do huge shops at Costco ever 4-6 months.
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Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by MikeUK
(Post 11261503)
I can add in that we used to spend around $1100 a month in Canada
How many people were you feeding and what were you eating to spend that amount per month? |
Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by MikeUK
(Post 11260335)
reading isn't your strong point is it....
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Re: Price comparison
Originally Posted by Steve_
(Post 11260354)
Such as?
I'm trying to compare like for like, you could say the same thing about Tesco. I suppose a more direct comparison would be Wal-Mart to Asda or Costco to Costco as they have the same parent companies but Tesco and Loblaw's are the largest supermarket chains respectively. Around here we have Fortinos, No Frills, Freshco, Food Basics, Sobeys, Metro, WalMart, Target, Shopper's Drug Mart (many have grocery sections now), Rexall (many have grocery sections), Costco, and a super center type place owned by Loblaws (I forget its name as I rarely go there). There are probably a couple of others that I am forgetting. With that many stores it is very easy to find things for good prices as they all have sales each week and are all competing for our business. |
Re: Price comparison
Alright, this got me curious to see what my grocery spend is.
Right now, Husband and I are living at home with my parents, and my younger adult brother has also moved back home, so it's a full house with 5 adults. I do probably about 2/3 of the cooking. Not all 5 of us are at home every night, and my mom does groceries occasionally as well. My total grocery bill from 21 March to 21 April, which is mostly Longos and Costco, one Whole Foods (needed something specific), one Starskys, and one Metro, plus LCBO, was about $800. I will also echo that we don't eat as much lamb as we used to, however I've found that the prices at Starskys for lamb are only a smidge higher than what we used to pay at Sainsburys. (For a 2kg full price lamb shoulder I'd pay about £20-22; at Starskys, the same lamb shoulder I paid about $35.) |
Re: Price comparison
We spend 200 a month on food for 2 people, what we eat varies week to week based on what is on sale and generally if its not on sale we don't buy it.
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