How much does your weekly food shop cost?
How much does your weekly food shop cost?
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audikarma

Original Poster:

58 posts

114 months

How many people in your house, how much do you spend, how often do you get a shop?


Household of two adults.
Get a shop every 7-10 days on average.
Spend £70 on average that covers breakfast, lunches and dinners.

Tend to order from Ocado or Waitrose, missus insists on free range meat which is a large part of our expenses. Usually bulk cook a few meals that then also provide lunch/dinner for other days.
Booze tends to be bought separately rather than on a weekly supermarket shop.

Jamescrs

5,486 posts

82 months

2 adults, 2 kids and a cat all costing towards the weekly grocery shop

It fluctuates between £100 and £160 depending on things I need to buy such as Laundry supplies, Cat food and Cat litter all add to the shop but aren't weekly purchases, toiletries, given I have a wife and two girls, these can make a big difference, never seen so many different shampoo's, conditioners and other hair products in one bathroom.

Sheets Tabuer

20,465 posts

232 months

Literally go to the supermarket every day and rarely walk out without spending 20 quid on a bag of nothing.

ChocolateFrog

32,660 posts

190 months

2 adults, 2 kids and a GSD is circa £150 - £200 a week.

oddman

3,365 posts

269 months

audikarma said:
How many people in your house, how much do you spend, how often do you get a shop?


Household of two adults.
Get a shop every 7-10 days on average.
Spend £70 on average that covers breakfast, lunches and dinners.

Tend to order from Ocado or Waitrose, missus insists on free range meat which is a large part of our expenses. Usually bulk cook a few meals that then also provide lunch/dinner for other days.
Booze tends to be bought separately rather than on a weekly supermarket shop.
£70 every 7-10 days in Waitrose/Ocado for two

My maths that £3.50 - 5.00 per person per day. Blimey

We cook almost everything from scratch - even bread. Nearest thing we have to 'ready meal' is breakfast cereal, some stuffed pasta or pizza if we're in a hurry. Also the bulk shop is from Morrison's. We also have fruit and veg from the garden and friends, gather the odd wild plant and I always have meat in the freezer from my own shooting or generous friends. We easily spend double your daily budget.

ETA cat is fed from supermarket but dogs online delivery just two adults but at least a couple of visitors a once or twice a week.


Edited by oddman on Monday 22 September 10:02

ThingsBehindTheSun

2,376 posts

48 months

Timely thread, two adults and after shopping yesterday I was thinking that the price had definitely shot up.

Including cleaning products we spend around £130 a week and that doesn't include any alcohol. We have one steak a week, otherwise we mostly have chicken for dinner. We shop at Tesco and we also buy own brand for virtually everything now.

I wouldn't be surprised if we were spending £550 a month on food now.



The0perator

378 posts

46 months

Budget £400 a month for two adults a 14 year old lad and a cat... usually gets within that

Countdown

45,255 posts

213 months

4 adults in the house

£100 a week on main shop (Asda)
£40 a week on top up shop
£20 a week at the butcher's

GT03ROB

13,854 posts

238 months

audikarma said:
Household of two adults.
Get a shop every 7-10 days on average.
Spend £70 on average that covers breakfast, lunches and dinners.

Tend to order from Ocado or Waitrose, missus insists on free range meat which is a large part of our expenses. Usually bulk cook a few meals that then also provide lunch/dinner for other days.
how do you manage that?

£300+ a week for 2. Gawd knows how she spends so much.

lufbramatt

5,508 posts

151 months

~£125/week for two adults and two kids. Might spend another £20-30 on bits and bobs through the week. We don't drink much at all, maybe a beer or two on a weekend.

A year ago we would rarely spend over £100 on the weekly shop.

The whole "cost of living crisis" thing has been dropped by the media but seems worse now than it was before.

ARH

1,237 posts

256 months

I go every week for 2 adults , the average for the last year is £62.93. I know its sad but it is all recorded, its a habit I got into when I was working out if I could afford to retire or not. smile This covers 95% of all meals, I don't try to save money, but equally i don't like to waste money so only buy what we need.

ferret50

2,390 posts

26 months

I have absolutely no idea!

The domestic staff take care of things like this.

hehe

spitfire-ian

4,010 posts

245 months

GT03ROB said:
audikarma said:
Household of two adults.
Get a shop every 7-10 days on average.
Spend £70 on average that covers breakfast, lunches and dinners.

Tend to order from Ocado or Waitrose, missus insists on free range meat which is a large part of our expenses. Usually bulk cook a few meals that then also provide lunch/dinner for other days.
how do you manage that?

£300+ a week for 2. Gawd knows how she spends so much.
I too was wondering how someone only manages to spend £70 a week for 2 people.

Two adults and two cats here and ours regularly is £150-£200 but that does include beer and wine. Usually also includes a large chicken or joint of meat to cook on a Sunday and use for other meals throughout the week.

Sporky

8,934 posts

81 months

We shop every 6 days at Ocado (because bagels come in bags of six). Typically £70-90 for two adults; almost all our meals cooked from scratch.

48Valves

2,465 posts

226 months

I don’t know the exact breakdown between food and other household items, but we were spending easily £1000 per month at the supermarket and on food while out. And that doesn’t include anything bought with cash. Then there is school dinners which is another £200 per month.

That’s for 2 adults two teenagers a small dog and a cat.




ARH

1,237 posts

256 months

spitfire-ian said:
GT03ROB said:
audikarma said:
Household of two adults.
Get a shop every 7-10 days on average.
Spend £70 on average that covers breakfast, lunches and dinners.

Tend to order from Ocado or Waitrose, missus insists on free range meat which is a large part of our expenses. Usually bulk cook a few meals that then also provide lunch/dinner for other days.
how do you manage that?

£300+ a week for 2. Gawd knows how she spends so much.
I too was wondering how someone only manages to spend £70 a week for 2 people.

Two adults and two cats here and ours regularly is £150-£200 but that does include beer and wine. Usually also includes a large chicken or joint of meat to cook on a Sunday and use for other meals throughout the week.
My food bill does not include alcohol, ( i don't class alcohol as food), I posted it above. If you cook from scratch its easy to do it for £70 a week, If you insist on buying ready made meals from M&S it may be more difficult. We don't eat a lot of expensive food, like steaks or lobster, but we do eat well. Insisting on buying branded stuff like Heinz Tomato Ketchup a £3 for 400ml ,when you can buy lidl stuff for £0.89 for 500ml will make a lot of difference to your bill. Often you will find the own brand stuff to be just as good if not better these days, 10 years ago this was not the case.

Shooter McGavin

8,332 posts

161 months

Two adults and a 10yo son.

We spend about 70 quid a week for the online shop (Asda) then maybe 20-30 topping up on bits and bobs.

That includes a bottle or two of wine and a few cans of Siren IPA for me and the missus.

We have a Waitrose in walking distance so if I have missed the online shop cut-off I occasionally go there, it's a nice treat but considerably more expensive.

untakenname

5,167 posts

209 months

I try and keep it under £200 per week for the two of us in the house but it's become harder with the rampant inflation combined with shrinkflation.

I've stopped using Lidl now as the like for like price compared with Sainsburys isn't that much different anymore, it used to be 30% cheaper but it's now more like 10% if that.

One interesting thing with Lidl is the fact their app keeps digital receipts going back to 2021, back then you could get cottage cheese for 45p (now over a pound) eggs were 6 for 89p and staples such as beetroot were 18p compared with 60p now!


Metric Max

1,690 posts

239 months

My food bill does not include alcohol i don't class alcohol as food)

But John Thaw in Inspector Morse said on many occasions that beer is food

ThingsBehindTheSun

2,376 posts

48 months

untakenname said:
I've stopped using Lidl now as the like for like price compared with Sainsburys isn't that much different anymore, it used to be 30% cheaper but it's now more like 10% if that.
We have always shopped at Tesco, but a few years ago if we were walking past a Lidl or Aldi I would pop in and get a few things and be amazed at how cheap some things like biscuits were. Now when I go in there I rarely buy anything as the prices seem to be exactly the same as Tesco. Some things such as their own brand Wagon Wheels are more expensive than buying real ones from Poundland.

They also used to do a great copy of Grey Goose Vodka, but have even stopped doing that now.

Doesn't stop the local Lidl being so busy on a Saturday afternoon that people are queueing to get into the car park and blocking the road.