How Often Do Grocery Prices Change?
How it works4 min readUpdated June 11, 2026
Prices are moving targets
Supermarket prices aren’t fixed; they shift on regular promotional cycles, in response to supply and seasonality, and as stores jockey on their most visible items. Any given product can carry several different prices over a couple of months. Because the changes are gradual and scattered across thousands of lines, shoppers rarely notice — which is exactly how a store you assume is cheapest slowly stops being so.
Why the cheapest store flips
Since each store moves its prices independently, the relative ranking changes too. The store that was cheapest for your basket last month can be overtaken when a competitor refreshes its promotions or when a category you buy heavily shifts. Loyalty to “the cheap store” is loyalty to a snapshot that’s already out of date.
What this means for you
Two habits follow. First, don’t trust a months-old impression of who’s cheapest — re-compare, especially before a large shop where the stakes are higher. Second, judge specials on today’s price, not memory: a “deal” is only a deal relative to the current going rate. The practical answer to constant change is to make checking effortless, so an up-to-date comparison is always a few seconds away rather than a chore you skip.
Frequently asked questions
- How often do supermarket prices change?
- Frequently — promotional cycles often run weekly, and supply and seasonal factors move prices on top of that. Individual items can change several times in a couple of months.
- Does the cheapest supermarket stay the same?
- Not reliably. Because stores re-price independently, the cheapest store for your basket can change week to week.
- When should I re-check prices?
- Before any big shop, and periodically otherwise, since a comparison goes stale as prices move.