Food is one of the biggest expenses after housing. Here are 12 actionable tips to reduce your grocery spending without living on beans and toast.
Overview
The average UK household spends around £60-£80 per week on groceries, and for many families that number is even higher. With food prices still elevated compared to a few years ago, cutting your grocery bill is one of the fastest ways to free up cash for saving or debt repayment. These aren't theoretical tips — they're practical changes you can start this week.
Plan Before You Shop
Write a meal plan for the week before you set foot in a shop. Check what you already have in the fridge and cupboards, then make a list of only what you need. People who shop with a list spend an average of 23% less than those who browse the aisles. Use an app like Mealime or just a notes app on your phone — the format doesn't matter, the discipline does.
Switch Supermarkets (or Shop Smarter)
If you're doing a full weekly shop at Waitrose or M&S, you're almost certainly paying a premium. Aldi and Lidl are consistently 20-30% cheaper for equivalent products. If you prefer Tesco or Sainsbury's, use their loyalty schemes properly — Tesco Clubcard prices can offer genuine savings, and Sainsbury's Nectar Prices do the same. Also consider Too Good To Go for discounted surplus food from local shops.
Embrace Own-Brand Products
Supermarket own-brand products are often made in the same factories as the big-name brands. The difference is the label and the price. Switching from branded to own-brand across your whole shop can save £15-£20 per week easily. Start with basics like pasta, tinned tomatoes, rice, and cleaning products — you genuinely won't taste the difference.
Reduce Food Waste
The average UK household throws away £700 worth of food per year. That's money going straight in the bin. Freeze bread, batch-cook meals, use leftovers creatively, and learn what 'best before' actually means (it's about quality, not safety — 'use by' is the one that matters). A simple rule: if it's going off tomorrow, cook it tonight or freeze it now.
Buy in Bulk (Strategically)
Bulk buying saves money on non-perishables like rice, pasta, toilet paper, and cleaning supplies. But only buy in bulk if you'll actually use it — a 5kg bag of rice is great value if your family eats rice regularly, but it's wasted money if it sits in the cupboard for two years. Costco and Amazon Subscribe & Save can offer genuine savings for the right items.
The Compound Effect
Saving £20 per week on groceries adds up to over £1,000 per year. Put that into a Cash ISA earning 4.5% and you've got a meaningful contribution to your savings growing tax-free. Small changes in your daily spending create big results over time — and groceries are one of the easiest places to start because you control every purchasing decision.
#groceries#saving money#supermarket tips#meal planning#UK budgeting
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