Supermarket Pricing Tactics, and How to Beat Them

How it works6 min readUpdated May 28, 2026

Loss leaders

Stores deliberately price a few high-profile items below cost to win the perception of being cheap and to get you through the door, expecting the rest of your trolley to make up the margin. The item itself is a genuine bargain — but the store is betting on everything around it. Buying the loss leader and nothing else is great; assuming the whole store is therefore cheapest is the trap.

Anchor and multi-buy pricing

A high “was” price next to a lower “now” makes the now-price feel like a win even if it’s the normal price. “3 for $5” framing nudges you to buy three when one was enough, and the per-unit price is sometimes no better than buying singly. Always translate these back to unit price before deciding the deal is real.

Placement and the trip itself

The most profitable products sit at eye level and on end-of-aisle displays; cheaper equivalents are often on the top or bottom shelf. Essentials get placed at the back so you walk past temptation to reach them. None of this is sinister — it’s just designed to lift the average basket, and awareness defuses most of it.

The one defence that always works

Every tactic operates on individual items and on perception. None of them survive a whole-basket comparison at today’s prices: if you total your real list across stores, the store that’s genuinely cheapest for you is revealed regardless of which items are dressed up as deals. Comparison is the counter-tactic.

Tactic vs counter-move

TacticLoss leader
What it doesLow price pulls you in
Counter-moveCompare the whole basket, not the headline item
TacticMulti-buy
What it doesNudges over-buying
Counter-moveCheck the unit price first
TacticAnchor “was/now”
What it doesInflates the saving
Counter-moveJudge on today’s unit price only
TacticEye-level placement
What it doesHides cheaper options
Counter-moveScan the top and bottom shelves

Frequently asked questions

What is a loss leader?
A product priced very low — sometimes below cost — to attract shoppers, in the expectation they’ll also buy higher-margin items. The deal is real for that item only.
Are multi-buy deals always cheaper?
No. Some leave the unit price unchanged or higher. Convert “X for $Y” to a per-unit price before deciding.
How do I shop around these tactics?
Compare the total of your actual basket across stores. Whole-basket comparison neutralises tactics that target single items or perception.