ECON The Era of One-Stop Grocery Shopping Is Over

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
(Good to see that the young families are learning what some of us had to learn 40-50 years ago. And that it still helps. W.T.)


The Era of One-Stop Grocery Shopping Is Over​



Consumers are making 8% more trips to different retailers as inflation continues to upend household budgets

By Rachel Wolfe
April 27, 2024 9:00 pm ET
WSJ

Harking back to the days before supermarkets, Americans are dividing their food shopping among more stores to save money.

Consumers bought groceries from an average of 20.7 different retailers between March 2023 and February 2024 according to data firm Numerator, up 23% from the same months between 2019 and 2020. In addition to visiting more stores, shoppers are also traveling to cheaper ZIP Codes to shop and pursuing loyalty programs and promotions in greater numbers, retail analysts say.

Treasure-hunt grocery shopping is the latest example of consumers changing their behavior in response to the higher of prices in our lives, from the homes we live in to the daycares where we send our kids.

Now, with groceries taking up the highest percentage of household budgets in 30 years, more shoppers are driving all over town in pursuit of deals.

Every Sunday, Lorin Augeri sits down at her Tampa, Fla., kitchen table with a pen and notebook to fastidiously plan her family of four’s meals for the week and plot out where she’ll purchase each ingredient. Some are from private-label brands only carried by certain retailers, while others are available in bulk or set to go on sale a certain day that week.

Keeping the household grocery bill under $250 a week now requires stops at Costco, Target, Publix, Sprouts and more.

“There are other things I would love to be doing and spending my money on, but right now we need to be focusing on what’s truly essential,” says 35-year-old Augeri, who runs operations for a tourism company.

A new normal​

Grocery prices are up 21% in three years, according to the Labor Department, helping drive the trend toward multi-stop shopping, consumer researchers and retail analysts say. Overall, grocery shoppers are making 8% more trips than they did last year, says consulting firm AlixPartners, and buying fewer items at each stop.

Traditional grocers ate up 66% of total consumer spending on food at home in 2022 according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the most recent year for which data is available. That’s down from 69% in 2017.

Roger Beahm, a marketing professor at Wake Forest University School of Business, says some food stores are now leaning into differentiation rather than trying to be all things to all people

“Retailers are looking at specific categories that they can excel in and being able to offer consumers superior products in these,” he says.

Lidl, a discount grocer, is trying to offer the best possible price on the item its shoppers are most likely to buy that week, and ideally hook them for the long haul. For Cinco de Mayo, that means six cans of beans for $4 and two-for-$5 bags of mixed cheese.


Worth the schlep​

Living in Brooklyn, N.Y., Michelle Young almost always chose proximity over price when it came to food shopping. That was before her youngest daughter transitioned off formula at the same time organic whole milk surpassed $6 a half gallon at her local corner store.

“She wouldn’t want to sleep so she would just ask for more milk and then spit it up and it was so painful, like, ‘No, not my expensive milk!’ ” says Young, a 41-year-old author.

Now, Young relies more on Target’s store brand (where Young says a gallon is usually around $2 cheaper). The family will often use excursions to Young’s parents’ in Long Island, N.Y., or to their second home in the Berkshires to grocery shop for less.

Young’s husband, Augustin Pasquet, has also made more of an effort to buy local eggs and meat straight from Massachusetts farmers. With grocery prices up so much, he says farm fresh no longer feels like a splurge.

Flight attendant Bahadir Senyurt has taken traveling for groceries to the extreme. While he’s long picked up a few local treats to share with his partner, Scott Cocking, when he returns, he’s more recently taken to filling half of his suitcase with staples he says cost less and taste better abroad.

Recent hauls have included the same rosé wine from Paris for $7 that Trader Joe’s was selling for $17, $2 European dish detergent available on Amazon for $15, as well as bags of espresso, pasta, olive oil and bread.

“I’ll survey the pantry before I head out to see what we’re running low on and stock up while I’m overseas,” says Senyurt, 48.

Shopping sales​

Roughly two-thirds of the 8,017 Americans consumers surveyed by retail marketing firm Advantage Solutions this past fall said they now lean heavily on in-store coupons before or during their shopping trips, compared with the 33% who said they used them in 2021.

Never one to pay attention to coupons until recently, Augeri in Tampa has turned shopping the sales into a game with her two young daughters.

“We guess how much money Mommy can save,” says Augeri. “The other day I saved $60 and we were, like, screaming.”

In Houston, 34-year-old Ashley McGeary has taken the opposite approach. She threw out her grocery list and is now guided by what’s on sale. McGeary, who works at an energy infrastructure company, says she goes to one of a few local stores almost every other day to take advantage of as many different discounts as possible.

“I’m being more flexible, and I end up eating more seasonally, which I think is healthier,” McGeary says.

“It’s a good feeling and a way of still feeling like I got a deal.”
 

greysage

On The Level
Flight attendant Bahadir Senyurt has taken traveling for groceries to the extreme. While he’s long picked up a few local treats to share with his partner, Scott Cocking, when he returns, he’s more recently taken to filling half of his suitcase with staples he says cost less and taste better abroad.

You know it's serious when they share a gay flight attendants grocery hacks.

My grocery hack is waiting a day or two longer to go grocery shopping and being happy with a simple meal made mostly of stored prep foods (canned stuff).
 

et2

TB Fanatic
sorry … I have a weird sense of humor. So would he be Bahadir Cocking eventually? So he could write a book… Better Cooking by Cocking. Yummy!!

Flight attendant Bahadir Senyurt has taken traveling for groceries to the extreme. While he’s long picked up a few local treats to share with his partner, Scott Cocking, when he returns, he’s more recently taken to filling half of his suitcase with staples he says cost less and taste better abroad.
 

et2

TB Fanatic
All said. Good thread. My grandparents always had at least 3 or 4 stores they shopped prices at. Grandma had a hand “file“ full of the latest coupons for each store. I can remember her cutting them from the newspapers and fliers.

S&H Green Stamps
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
If the person in the story from Tampa regularly shops at “Sprouts” then they aren’t budget minded. Sprouts is a high end grocery. In some cases very high end. And yet you can buy many of the same products on Amazon or at Wally World for for less.

$250/week is $1000 per month. She could do far better by buying staple items in bulk and then cooking fresh that way. Since we don’t have her grocery list, we don’t know how many pre-packaged items she is purchasing or the brands.
 

kyrsyan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I do site to store. That allows me to compare the prices and split the orders if needed. To be honest though, since I've been using Naturally A Deal, I just don't need as much from the stores.

Using the site to store also helps with the impulse buys. I don't go in so I don't get caught by them. And I use the carts as my grocery list, so I review and edit before I send the order in.

I think the stores around here may have already caught on to this because most of the time they are within pennies of each other now. End result for me is that I'll go to whichever has most of what I need unless there is a really good sale. Or we need something in specific that only one store has.

The only two stores I have to physically enter are Costco and Aldi. Costco is once a month. Aldi is even rarer.

Starting this month, I can get pork and lamb from a local farm. Amd that makes me happy. I'll actually be clearing space to buy whole animals come fall, and possibly chicken as well. Now I just need a good source for rabbit. At least until I can get my stuff in place.
 

SouthernBreeze

Has No Life - Lives on TB
It's still a one stop shop for us. We live so far away from a larger town that we go to a smaller town closer to us to shop. There, we are limited to Walmart and Food Giant. Prices are cheaper at Walmart. I do order from Sam's club once a month for bulk items. I stop in at Aldi's about twice a year when in the larger town to stock up on their chocolate bars.
 

moldy

Veteran Member
I buy just the specials. We have meat still from raising our own - we have a garden and I can fruit in the summer when it's on sale. This week at Safeway, I bought $200 worth of groceries, but paid $120 as most of it was on sale (I did get some expensive lunch meat for DH - he doesn't ask for much- and a supplement for myself. Those two together were over $40). I bought another few items that were on sale at the local grocer. I don't understand how anyone can go shopping without looking at what is on sale, and putting off buying what is not on sale.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
I'm fortunate to be near a street where there's an Aldi and a Fareway close together.

I don't have the time or energy to run all over town for things, but with careful planning and eating in-season, I can keep costs down in the winter.

In the summer, I try to buy as much as possible at the farmer's markets, but this summer, I probably won't be able to afford that, except for meat and eggs, which I budget for: I get those from local families so I build those connections.

Added: I will planting more of the summer veggies this year: beans, summer squash, cukes. I grow mostly root veggies for winter, along with winter squash.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Costco for some stuff.

Most meat I get from the restaurant store, but thats something that needs to be done on a project weekend, because it needs to be divided bag vac and frozen.
Much is is in 40 pound quantities.

ShopRite for everything else.
We have a stop and shop but they are expensive. Walmart which I hate and Aldi.

I only tried the Aldi once for the stuff I couldn't get at Costco. I struck out on most the items and never tried again.

According to my mother it's a very small Aldi compared to the one near her that she frequents.

They were supposed to pop in a lidel a few years ago but that never happened.
 

mikeabn

Finally not a lurker!
I shop the sales but I've noticed Acme seems to have stopped the buy one- get two more. I make a point of searching the remainder and clearance items. When I move from the People's Republic of New Jersey I will be going to a place near another PX/commissary as the savings are good, but nowhere as good as they used to be.
 

Wildwood

Veteran Member
That's the way I bought groceries for decades and I loved it. I'd love to be able to shop that way again. Unfortunately, a WM supercenter is all we have now. I don't consider Dollar General or Dollar Tree to be grocery stores.

We had three decent stores in this little town and every one of them mailed out a sale circular every week and I took full advantage of the sales. Two went out of business before our super center opened so I can't really blame our local regular old WM for their demise. When they upgraded to a super center, the last one left finally folded.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I only tried the Aldi once for the stuff I couldn't get at Costco. I struck out on most the items and never tried again.

According to my mother it's a very small Aldi compared to the one near her that she frequents.

Our Aldi is an average sized Aldi store. The one in the town south of here is almost double in size. And I have been in Aldi stores that are smaller than the one we have here in town, central Iowa. I'd say give it another try. We buy our milk almost exclusively from Aldi, and the ice cream in the black boxes are to die for as is their chocolates.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
That's the way I bought groceries for decades and I loved it. I'd love to be able to shop that way again. Unfortunately, a WM supercenter is all we have now. I don't consider Dollar General or Dollar Tree to be grocery stores.

We had three decent stores in this little town and every one of them mailed out a sale circular every week and I took full advantage of the sales. Two went out of business before our super center opened so I can't really blame our local regular old WM for their demise. When they upgraded to a super center, the last one left finally folded.

The problem with the "local" grocery store is that when the owner is ready to retire nine times out of ten there is no one who wants to take ownership of the grocery store. Happened to the local grocery store back home, all five boys went to college and/or the military, by the time pops was ready to retire the boys were all established with careers, family, and were all either in their 40's or 50's. None of the employees were interested in taking over the grocery store. Mind you the owner didn't get ownership of the store until his dad, who was a butcher, retired at the ripe old age of 95+, the owner was already in his late 60's. The same thing is happening to farms across the US.
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
I rarely shop Virginia or MD these days. Between the one grocery in the county seat and local butchers/farm stores I get everything I need. I will be getting another order for beef ready in the next month or so; bacon if they have it.

There is Costco and a little grocery store called "Sharp Shopper" in Winchester VA.
Now Costco requires a membership to get in and if you know someone with a membership they can get you inside but anything you want they have to buy it for you and you pay them back.
Sharp Shopper is open to anyone and a lot of the innovatory is always changing and offer great deals on bulk canned foods and good deals on soda pop, Days brand name soda is what you're looking for.
 

dioptase

Veteran Member
We have 5 grocery stores, but DH mostly only goes to one, and the farmers market. I get certain things online from Costco, and other things from Amazon (we have Prime). Before I recently broke my wrist, I also had a farm box delivered every other week. I'll restart that once I can lift things and use my hand again. We've yet to plant our tomatoes, which is all I'll have this summer, beyond the perennial herbs. I'm the gardener, not DH, so I'll have to micromanage him on that, as I can't do a thing.
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I buy alot of what will eventually be my food at a rural feed store about a half hour from my home, where it is cheaper than Memphis based Tractor Supply or other Memphis based stores.

I bring it home, supplement it with weeds from my chemically un-treated lawn, and feed it to my cantancarous bags of feathers.

They eat it, and then magically turn it into farm fresh eggs and chicken soup, and natural fertilizer for my organic vegetable garden.

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bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
DD usually does most of the grocery shopping for all of us, and she shops at 3-4 stores, but she still spends lots of $ on junk food, mainly for the little ones. :rolleyes:

DH and I make a run every few weeks on Tuesdays to Fresh Market for ground Chuck (ha ha! iPad capitalized Chuck!) and boneless chicken breasts. It’s been several years now that they have sold both for $3.99/pound. WAY less and much better quality than other area grocery stores. I don’t know how long they can keep it up.
 

shane

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Hard to take seriously the struggle to find cheaper food sources by somebody so strapped like this example in OP article;

“The family will often use excursions to Young’s parents’ in Long Island, N.Y., or to their second home in the Berkshires to grocery shop for less.”

Makes me wonder what year/make/model of car(s) they also still own and find essential to have and to be making monthly payments on, too?

People’s current priorities, too long embraced and not sooner relinquished & downsized, will be for many their downfall.

Panic Early, Beat the Rush!
- Shane
 

anna43

Veteran Member
Since I no longer get ads from HyVee I no longer shop there and no ads from Fareway so seldom shop there. I'm fortunate that I can shop at Aldi, Walmart and Dollar Tree all within a block of one another. HyVee and Target are also within that block but again no ads so no shopping. Fareway is on my way into/out of town so is easy but again no ads seldom shop. I was getting the Fareway ad in my e-mail weekly, but it stopped for some reason. HyVee's online ad is a hassle, so I don't bother. Aldi's online ad is easy, so I sometime check it more to know what produce is available than for prices as they are usually lowest anyway. When I asked about HyVee ads I was told the ad was always available in the store -- no help as I live 25 miles away. Local store has an ad but prices are usually high even when on the ad. I do shop there and always look through the ad before shopping and occasionally find good bargains.

I envy people posting how much they save by shopping ads. No ads, no savings. I'm fortunate I have Aldi and Walmart for lowest food prices without ads. Dollar Tree's grocery prices are usually higher than Aldi and Walmart.
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
We mainly shop at Krogers which is 82 miles from us. We do there sales and Digital Coupons which save lots of money. We shopped on Saturday, since I needed a new floor jack to remove a wheel from the tractor so the tire could be repaired.

At Krogers, the bill was $217 less discounts, coupons and sales which had a final bill of $144 which was a savings of $73. We then bought fuel at 10 cents off per gallon. Our best fuel discount was $1 per gallon. If you have a near by Krogers, there is no fee to join and the savings and fuel points will mount up. Fridays at Krogers is 4 times the fuel point for if your bill is $125 dollars then you get 500 fuel points which is 50 cents off per gallon of fuel.

We schedule shopping trips to include doctor's appointments and special buys.

We also shop at Sams and Walmart and a couple of local grocery stores on an as needed basis due to cost.

We have been using coupons and sales for 47 years. Saving money on groceries allows for a few extras.

Texican....
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Hard to take seriously the struggle to find cheaper food sources by somebody so strapped like this example in OP article;

“The family will often use excursions to Young’s parents’ in Long Island, N.Y., or to their second home in the Berkshires to grocery shop for less.”

Makes me wonder what year/make/model of car(s) they also still own and find essential to have and to be making monthly payments on, too?

People’s current priorities, too long embraced and not sooner relinquished & downsized, will be for many their downfall.

Panic Early, Beat the Rush!
- Shane
Haha...I have to remind myself sometimes that a great many of we "little people" have more net $$$ worth than the ones living on Long Island or in The Berkshires. They may well be more broke and squirming than we are. They probably just qualify for more debt. :lol:
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Since I no longer get ads from HyVee I no longer shop there and no ads from Fareway so seldom shop there. I'm fortunate that I can shop at Aldi, Walmart and Dollar Tree all within a block of one another. HyVee and Target are also within that block but again no ads so no shopping. Fareway is on my way into/out of town so is easy but again no ads seldom shop. I was getting the Fareway ad in my e-mail weekly, but it stopped for some reason. HyVee's online ad is a hassle, so I don't bother. Aldi's online ad is easy, so I sometime check it more to know what produce is available than for prices as they are usually lowest anyway. When I asked about HyVee ads I was told the ad was always available in the store -- no help as I live 25 miles away. Local store has an ad but prices are usually high even when on the ad. I do shop there and always look through the ad before shopping and occasionally find good bargains.

I envy people posting how much they save by shopping ads. No ads, no savings. I'm fortunate I have Aldi and Walmart for lowest food prices without ads. Dollar Tree's grocery prices are usually higher than Aldi and Walmart.

The ads are online. The paper ads we used to get here in town came once in a week in the freebie weekly newspaper that came in the mail. That newspaper stopped when covid started.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Haha...I have to remind myself sometimes that a great many of we "little people" have more net $$$ worth than the ones living on Long Island or in The Berkshires. They may well be more broke and squirming than we are. They probably just qualify for more debt. :lol:

I used to work for the "rich and somewhat famous" as a nanny back in the 80's, most are asset rich and cash poor, just like most farmers I know. Bills get reconciled/paid at the end of the fiscal year.
 

straightstreet

Life is better in flip flops
It's still a one stop shop for us. We live so far away from a larger town that we go to a smaller town closer to us to shop. There, we are limited to Walmart and Food Giant. Prices are cheaper at Walmart. I do order from Sam's club once a month for bulk items. I stop in at Aldi's about twice a year when in the larger town to stock up on their chocolate bars.
We do too - Walmart is 30 minutes away. Food Giant is in the small town closest to us. We go to Walmart once a month. Food Giant if there's good deals in the weekly ad than we'll get those. Sams club is a every 6 months stock up trip for us. Food Giant and Sam's Club have good meats with a real butcher. Walmart is bleh and I don't like or trust their meats except for Perdues organic chicken that comes in a box with each chicken breast individually vacuum packed.
 

SouthernBreeze

Has No Life - Lives on TB
We do too - Walmart is 30 minutes away. Food Giant is in the small town closest to us. We go to Walmart once a month. Food Giant if there's good deals in the weekly ad than we'll get those. Sams club is a every 6 months stock up trip for us. Food Giant and Sam's Club have good meats with a real butcher. Walmart is bleh and I don't like or trust their meats except for Perdues organic chicken that comes in a box with each chicken breast individually vacuum packed.

From time to time, we switch from Walmart to Food Giant. It depends on if we need to stop in at Tractor Supply. Food Giant and Tractor Supply are next door to each other.

We buy the bulk of all our meat at a small town meat market where they have their own butchers that can and will make the meat into whatever cut you want. We shop there once a month. I forgot to mention that in my earlier post.
 

hd5574

Veteran Member
We are lucky to have a great selection of stores that are in reasonable distance...
The furthest away is Costco 25 miles.. it is in the mall..and has the gas station... very close is a large Walmart..and a Wegmans...and Lowe's just up the road on the way home is Northern Tool....then we have a BJ's...like Costco.... the next shopping center has Weis, Aldi's and Tractor Supply..
a bit up the road is Lidel.. just up the is Giant Food... with good gas discounts... the gas station across the parking lot our credit union next to the gas station...Home Depot.... they are... building a Publix near that shopping center....then closer to our house ..about 5 miles Away ay
a Food Lion and a smaller Walmart..even closer a Dollar General...with in a half mile .
we plan our shopping trips to save . money and gasoline...some places we only get one or two things... and stock up for several months at a time.. but can't get everything done at just one place....and we live in the country on AG land with large tracts around us..
 
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