Are Store-Brand Groceries Worth It?

Buying guide5 min readUpdated April 30, 2026

What you’re actually paying for

A branded product’s price includes marketing, packaging and brand premium that a store brand skips. For commodity goods — where the contents are effectively identical regardless of label — that premium buys you nothing in the bowl or the bottle. This is why a tin of store-brand chopped tomatoes or a bag of store-brand plain flour can sit at a fraction of the branded price with no meaningful difference in use.

Where store brand wins easily

Staples with little formulation to differentiate them are the safest swaps: flour, sugar, rice, pasta, oats, tinned tomatoes and beans, baking soda, bleach and other cleaning products. Here the savings are real and the risk is low. A basket weighted toward these items is where switching to store brand delivers the biggest, most reliable cut.

Where it’s a closer call

Products where recipe, texture or specific flavour matter — some sauces, certain snacks, coffee, particular dairy — are more personal. The branded version may genuinely suit you better, and that’s fine; the point is to decide deliberately rather than buy the brand on autopilot.

How to test without risk

Switch one staple at a time and judge it in normal use. Keep the swaps that pass and revert the few that don’t. Over a few weeks you’ll settle on a personalised mix that holds quality where it counts and banks the savings everywhere else.

Where store-brand swaps pay off

CategoryBaking staples (flour, sugar)
Typical savingHigh
Swap confidenceVery safe
CategoryTinned goods
Typical savingHigh
Swap confidenceVery safe
CategoryCleaning products
Typical savingHigh
Swap confidenceSafe
CategoryCoffee & specific sauces
Typical savingMedium
Swap confidenceTaste-test first

Frequently asked questions

Are store-brand and name-brand products made in the same factory?
Sometimes, but not always. The practical test is quality in use, not where it was made.
Which store-brand swaps are safest?
Commodity staples — flour, sugar, rice, tinned tomatoes, cleaning products — where formulation barely varies between labels.
How much can switching save?
It varies, but store brands are commonly 20–40% cheaper than the name-brand equivalent, so even a few weekly swaps add up.