It's been the least expensive place for these shopping essentials for the most of the last 18 months
A supermarket which has been cheapest for a basket of essential groceries since the end of January is now even cheaper.
This week its bill for the shopping basket containing milk, bread, butter, tea bags, coffee, beans, chicken and mince has returned to its earlier lower price of £11.58 after it dropped the price of its 500g pack of mince.I bought exactly the same shopping from Asda and with the Tesco Clubcard to see which is cheapestThe basket at Lidl works out 11% cheaper than Morrisons, which has now been the most expensive for three consecutive weeks.
There have been no other price changes in this week's comparison, a reassuring sign that the pace of rises has slowed. It also says that Lidl's mince is cheaper because it's 25% fat and that its tea bags are heavier and of better quality.
United Kingdom Latest News, United Kingdom Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Tesco to open Burger King drive-thru at Blackburn supermarketOfficial plans have been submitted to Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council
Read more »
'Imminent risk' as dead animals found on floor of supermarketShuida Zhang was prosecuted after council inspectors found horrific conditions at his business
Read more »
Horrific scenes in supermarket as rotting animal corpses strewn over floorShuifa Zhang was taken to court after an inspection revealed the conditions on his shop.
Read more »
The real impact of supermarket loyalty cards on shopping habitsWhether you think it's a psychological marketing tactic or simply to save customer's money, we asked people in Accrington, Burnley and Darwen what they think of supermarket loyalty cards
Read more »
Return of the milkman: Eco-loving millennials who love reusable glass bottles and hate supermarket...Some 2,000 homes a week are signing up to have milk delivered, reversing the clamour to buy cheaper, longer-lasting milk in cartons in supermarkets.
Read more »
Return of the milkman: Eco-loving millennials who love reusable glass bottles and hate supermarket...Some 2,000 homes a week are signing up to have milk delivered, reversing the clamour to buy cheaper, longer-lasting milk in cartons in supermarkets.
Read more »