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Slash your grocery bill with store brands

Posted Sep 21 2009, 07:48 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from J.D. Roth at partner blog Get Rich Slowly.

The October 2009 issue of Consumer Reports contains an article extolling the virtues of generic store-brand products. While shoppers used to sacrifice quality when choosing generic, that's no longer the case. From the article:

If concern about taste has kept you from trying store-brand foods, hesitate no more. In blind tests, our trained tasters compared a big national brand with a store brand in 29 food categories. Store and national brands tasted about equally good 19 times. Four times, the store brand won; six times, the national brand won.

In other words, store brands offer roughly the same quality as national brands, but at a much-reduced cost. How much reduced? Consumer Reports says the store brands they tested cost on average 27% less than the name-brand equivalents.

How much can you save?
Sometimes theory is one thing and reality another. It's nice that Consumer Reports can score great deals on store brands. But could I? Last week, I walked to two local grocery stores to do my own research. First I looked at Safeway, where Kris and I shop most often. Next, I walked across the street to Fred Meyer, a store we usually try to avoid. (The store is huge and its layout makes little sense to me.)

I spent an hour in each store, roaming the aisles, looking for representative prices on a variety of items. I tried to pick one item at random from every section of the store. When I'd finished, I had a list of 25 products for which each store carried the same name brand and their own store-brand equivalent.

The results actually surprised me. You can save a lot of money with store-brand products -- far more than I suspected. Here's the raw data from my research:

The first column lists the name-brand item I used as a basis for comparison. I've given each store two columns, one for the price of the name-brand item, and one for the generic item. On each line, red text indicates the highest-priced option and green text indicates the least expensive option.

Here's a closer look at some of these comparisons:

  • I'm out of my Head & Shoulders shampoo. I just threw away the bottle this morning. Normally I buy actual Head & Shoulders at Safeway, which costs me $5.99 if it's not on sale. If I were to instead buy the Fred Meyer store brand, I'd pay only $2.49 -- a savings of nearly 60%.
  • At Safeway, standard Charmin two-ply toilet paper costs $10.99 for 12 rolls. At $9.49, the store brand isn't much cheaper. But if I were to go across the street to Fred Meyer, I'd pay just $4.89 for the store brand. (Actually, Kris and I get our toilet paper at Costco, and I have no idea what we pay.)
  • Hungry? For $2.17, you could buy a can of generic chicken noodle soup, a box of generic saltine crackers, and a bottle of generic root beer at Fred Meyer. Buying name-brand equivalents at Safeway would cost you $6.18. (You could eat three of those meals using generic Fred Meyer food for the price of one meal from Safeway.)

You get the idea. Buying store brands at Safeway would save nearly 22% for the items on this list. At Fred Meyer, I could save more than 36%. And Fred Meyer store brands cost 44% less than name brands at Safeway -- without the need for a "loyalty card."

A note on methodology: While conducting this survey, I faced a tough choice. Which price should I list? The non-sale price for each item? Or the sale price? Of the 25 name-brand items listed, 15 were on sale at Safeway and 14 were on sale at Fred Meyer. (There was a lot of overlap on the sales, too.) At Safeway, 20 of the generics were on sale; 10 were on sale at Fred Meyer. I chose to list non-sale prices because it's impossible to know which items are on sale when.

Running the numbers
I learned a number of things from this project. First off, we're shopping at the wrong grocery store. Buying name-brand products at Safeway is the most expensive way to go. Based on this list, shopping at Fred Meyer instead would save us nearly 12%, even without moving to generics.

Second, generics are not always a bargain. On 10 out of the 25 items, the Safeway generic cost as much (or more) than the name-brand equivalent at Fred Meyer. On the other hand, Fred Meyer store-brand items offer fantastic savings, especially when compared with Safeway's name-brand selections. (The items on this list were 44% less expensive.)

Another factor to consider is that some stores have a better selection of store brands than others. Subjectively speaking, Fred Meyer seemed to have about double the number of generic items that Safeway had -- and often had multiple sizes or varieties. They carried several types of store-brand salsa, for example, while Safeway's selection was more limited. At both stores, the generics were generally staple items: rice, toilet paper, tomato sauce, etc.

Conclusions
"We should buy more generics," I told Kris after collating my data.

"We do buy generics," she said.

"We do? Like what?"

"...," she said (proving for once that Kris is not always right).

Though Kris and I do a lot of things to save money, we don't actually buy a lot of store brands. We're not opposed to them -- we just stick to brands we trust. This brand loyalty costs us money. Here's how Consumer Reports put it in the article that inspired my research: "Switching to store brands can be a painless way to cut your grocery bill." They're right.

After conducting this experiment, I realize there are four key steps to saving big bucks on groceries. More than anything else, these actions can help struggling families cut costs:

This exercise was eye-opening in another way. I discovered that shopping at Safeway costs us money. If the data here is representative, then switching to Fred Meyer could save us more than 10% on our grocery bill. That's enough to let us dine out one extra time per month. Or it's more money we can save for our trip to France next year.

Kris and I are both wary of switching from Safeway to Fred Meyer -- as I mentioned, there's more to this decision than price -- but I suspect that if we give it a chance, we'll find ways to deal with Fred Meyer's annoyances and save money in the process.

Related reading at Get Rich Slowly:

How to save $100 (or more) at the grocery store this month

Saving at the supermarket: 15 great grocery shopping tips

Unit pricing: Get more food for less money

Comments

 

You should have tried Target/Walmart - I'm sure you could have saved even more.

I'm actually surprised by this article, not because I didn't know how much could be saved by buying store brands, but because a writer who habitually doles out financial advice apparently never looked at the cost of his groceries before. "Kris and I get our toilet paper at Costco, and I have no idea what we pay." Seriously?

Every time I go grocery shopping, I quickly scan the prices for every variety of the item on my list and choose the most cost-effective one. It's not that difficult. It's also necessary, since brand loyalty to generic can be just as damaging as loyalty to the national manufacturers: I may buy the store's bread flour one month but notice that Gold Medal is on sale for cheaper the next.

I buy staples (milk, eggs, meats, oils) in store brands, unless name brand is cheaper. For non-staples make a point of buying one package of a store brand item to see if you like it. I ended up staying with name brands for paper products, because I have a sensitive skin. I found brand name condinments are cheaper when they are on sale, so I mostly stay with name brands. However my store has great frozen potatoes, waffles, ice cream, seltzer and chicken nuggets so that I don't pay attention to brand name items in this class anymore.

Store brands vary quite a bit from store to store, so just develop your favorites over time and you won't feel deprived one bit

Not all generics are created equal either.  I've found that sometimes there's two store brands: a rock-bottom store brand that isn't very good, or a slightly-less-cheap but nice quality store brand that is a great substitute for the name-brand product.

Kroger has two different store brands. Their Kroger brand is a decent generic that goes head to head with most everything else. There's also a discount brand whose name suddenly eludes me. That brand features things like frozen vegetables (usually small or unattractive, but still passing USDA specs), canned soups that are loaded with salt, and paper products that, sheet for sheet, cost EXACTLY THE SAME as the Kroger brand but come in smaller packaging.

I avoid a lot of store brands because I pair coupons with name brand items. When places like Kroger have double or triple coupons I get better deals with the name brands.

I still buy bulk purchases at Costco. For example, the Kirkland brand toilet paper is as soft as Angel Soft, but 20% cheaper.

I buy my shampoo at Walgreens. Their version of what I normally use is 40% cheaper.

I love buying Kroger brand products but if I need more of a discount I go to Walmart/Target or Aldi

Once you learn the layout of Fred Meyer you should feel more comfortable there.  

And Costco is cheaper than most supermarkets assuming -- and it's a big caveat -- you will use all of what you purchase.  BTW, that pack of TP that you pay $10.99 for 12 rolls for at Safeway?  A 36-pack of Costco brand is $17.49, I believe.  Also check the number of sheets per roll to get a better idea of the actual cost per sheet.

I have to agree with Tamara: Seriously, you've JUST figured this out?

This ranks up there with people now discovering the benefits of using a written grocery list.

This is true, as far as it goes.  But store brands vary widely in their quality, and ingredients.  There are food allergies in our family, so just about any baked type store brand at Target isn't going to work because there is milk in all of it.  Cub works better for those items.  But Cub doesn't have generics of some of the things I really prefer in generic, like medications and drink mixes.  Are the savings worth the time it'd take to shop BOTH?  Time will tell.

Also, watch those prices.  Quite often the name-brand soy milk is on sale for less than the store brand.  That's just one example, based on my personal experience.  Watching your pennies takes more effort than just slavish loyalty to generics!

I work with folks who travel to several different stores to get BOGOs and twofers. I suppose it works if you live within a certain radius of all the stores.

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