Friday, November 22, 2024

Sainsbury’s brings Aldi price-match scheme to local stores

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Sainsbury’s has promised to match prices to Aldi of up to 200 products in its convenience stores, amid pressure on grocers to bring more deals to their local shops.

The UK’s second-largest supermarket said it was the first in the country to make such a commitment.

Shoppers will now see prices that are the same, or cheaper, on items such as milk, bread, butter, pasta, chicken, steak and vegetables in its roughly 1,400 Sainsbury’s Local shops.

It already matches prices to Aldi on more than 500 own-label and branded products in larger supermarkets and online.

Sainsbury’s chief executive Simon Roberts said the chain had ‘worked hard’ to improve the prices of staple items (Sainsbury’s/PA)
Sainsbury’s chief executive Simon Roberts said the chain had ‘worked hard’ to improve the prices of staple items (Sainsbury’s/PA)

Aldi, a rival German discounter, was named the cheapest supermarket of 2023 by consumer group Which?

The scheme will replace the “pocket friendly prices” campaign which was introduced last year to showcase lower prices across its convenience stores.

Simon Roberts, chief executive of Sainsbury’s, said: “In our Sainsbury’s Locals, we’ve worked hard to offer market-leading prices on essential items and popular breakfast, lunch and dinner staples.

“We have also refreshed our local store layouts and rebalanced space, increasing the number of products in store by 7% and adding more food-on-the-move products – the primary mission of most convenience shoppers.”

A recent study by Which? found that consumers who buy their food at convenience stores could be paying up to a fifth more than at larger branches of the same supermarket.

Loyalty card members of Sainsbury’s could be paying an average of 14% more at Sainsbury’s Local than at larger stores, the survey conducted last month showed.

Which? said price disparities were likely to have a bigger impact on people without easy access to transport or online deliveries, making them more reliant on smaller nearby stores.

Mr Roberts said Sainsbury’s had invested nearly £1 billion “in value” since shifting its focus back to food four years ago.

It did not disclose how much it was costing to extend the Aldi price-match scheme.

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