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House and home

Supermarket spending

(86 Posts)
mollie Sat 30-Dec-17 16:55:21

Following on from other food related threads I’m trying to judge what is a reasonable/average supermarket weekly spend for two adults. Supermarket rather than food because I buy food, toiletries and cleaning materials altogether but an idea of all or just food would be very useful. The average shopping basket used by government doesn’t look anything like my shop so that’s a pointless gauge. Can anyone suggest a round figure or a % of household budget please?

Maggiemaybe Sun 31-Dec-17 17:18:01

I doubt it, ffinnochio, from what I saw on our latest visit to France, the food prices there are on the whole higher than they are here. I was jealous of your wine prices though! smile

Sheilasue Sun 31-Dec-17 17:16:13

Spend between 70 to 90 audipends on what I have run out of and I shop on line, find it works out cheaper because your only buying what you want apart from Christmas but I bought things for Christmas starting the end of October each week.

ffinnochio Sun 31-Dec-17 17:13:41

This is an interesting thread. I am shortly returning to the uk, having lived in France for 15 years. When I’ve returned over the years, I’ve tended to think in terms of ‘holiday money’, so haven’t really grasped the day to day housekeeping costs. Think I may be in for a shock! I cook from scratch, like a bargain, buy in season, and enjoy good quality stuff. Won’t have a veg. patch either. At the moment I spend between €90/€110 a week. Oo-err ... might have to tweak financial planning!

MaryXYX Sun 31-Dec-17 16:53:37

Starbird: I have a meal out once a week, sometimes twice. I live in a flat so I don't grow anything or keep anything that will produce food. I just eat very little and hardly any meat. I'm still spending quite a lot more than people on benefits.

GrammaH Sun 31-Dec-17 16:50:40

Mollie you've said it seems like an "obscene amount of money" that you pay to the supermarket each month and you want to be "shocked out of it" - £700 per month is over £170 per week which, in the light of all the other posts, does seem rather excessive - it's nearly 3 times my weekly shopping bill and I certainly don't feel we stint ourselves or go short. We eat healthily and enjoy good quality products, many of them store's own brands. I'd be fascinated to see what exactly you buy on a regular basis that costs so much. I guess the response from everyone may have given you the shock you wanted. However, at the end of the day, it's your money and if that's how you like to spend it, it's nobody's business but yours! Happy New Year!

mollie Sun 31-Dec-17 16:17:34

Ha ha downtoearth you’re as bad as me with typos !

mollie Sun 31-Dec-17 16:15:27

Yep, point taken. Let’s just say I’m not as far off the mark as I imagined! Plenty of room for improvement though.

downtoearth Sun 31-Dec-17 16:12:15

And I just use Tesco..keep it all in one place

downtoearth Sun 31-Dec-17 16:09:50

Grrh lovely

downtoearth Sun 31-Dec-17 16:09:33

She is lively..but lively as well x

downtoearth Sun 31-Dec-17 16:08:45

Partner works ,I get state pension ..also have teenage GD as a dependant..I take £110.00 housekeeping a week, this covers packed lunches , toiletries,cleaning materials and food, I cook from scratch,We eat well, and from that I put money aside for Christmas, outings and a holiday break, and a new baby due in June.. sometimes clothes and a book might fall in the trolley,I like the zapper gizmo when shopping which tells me how much I an spending,I head for the reduced section and freeze I also treat myself to a bottle of wine..meet my lively GN friend * Mollie *..I do do buy own brand and economy brands that are no different and we eat fresh veg..

M0nica Sun 31-Dec-17 16:05:30

GrandmaMoira. I always referred to the figures as being for pensioner households, not per person. If you look at the graphs in the government report I referred to, it showed in great detail how these incomes were made up.

I am in my mid-70s, had a professional career, working full time for most of my working life. In my 40s and 50s I put every penny I could spare into my occupational pension and now have a total income close to the overall average wage. Most of my friends have similar backgrounds. We are the fortunate ones that make the average as high as it is.

Maggiemaybe Sun 31-Dec-17 15:57:45

I’m reassured that I’m not too far off the average. We spend about £700 a month

Unless I've missed someone, I don't think anyone has said they spend so much for 2 people. I think you're actually way over the average, mollie.

starbird Sun 31-Dec-17 14:38:09

MaryXYZ please share what you eat (or don’t eat) - do you grow your own veg, keep chickens, or eat with friends and family a lot or do anything to supplement your spend?

My budget was £60 a week for one which seems to be close to average, but as I have a little job I have let it go out of the window. However new year resolution is to cut down and save as the job will not be forever and I will be back to the basic pension which allows few luxuries for a person living alone.

mollie Sun 31-Dec-17 14:17:55

Grrr, ignore that last bit. I misread my own post. Idiot woman,!

mollie Sun 31-Dec-17 14:16:51

Can’t see !!

mollie Sun 31-Dec-17 14:16:22

Mind if I say that all your answers are fascinating? Its interesting to hear how we all manage and I’m reassured that I’m not too far off the average. We spend about £700 a month in supermarkets and I know where it all goes but I asked the question to gain some sense of scale. Clearly there’s room to improve and as a couple we’re doing that mostly for health reasons. We’ve dropped the crisps, nibbles, biscuits and cakes but upped fruit, veg and chosen organic sometimes so our savings on the rubbish is wiped away with the extra goodies. I use Waitrose and Tesco and compare prices but can see that chasing a bargain could become time consuming. I can’t quite give up pushing a trolley in favour of online shopping yet - my 25 mile round trip to the supermarket is also a chance to have coffee with a chum - but I can see the advantages just yet.

grandtanteJE65 Sun 31-Dec-17 13:42:18

May I suggest, Mollie, that you keep an old fashioned housekeeping account for a month or two? Write done what you spend, each time you go shopping, and what you spend it on. I find a notebook or jotter easier than using the computer for this.

I add mine up every Saturday and sometimes add the whole lot together at the end of the month.

This way I can see what our housekeeping money actually is used for, and whether any of the expenditure is unnecessary or unnecessarily large.

I don't really think you can use other peoples' advice here, as it does depend where you shop how much you have to pay. As others say too, we have different habits.

Never having had a large income, I am a mine of (useful? or useless?) information on living on a shoestring, like the fact that there is always more in the container than you think. This applies to EVERYTHING from sugar packets to body shampoo containers, which seem to be designed to be wasteful. By upending ours, we both showered for a week on what was left inside an apparently empty plastic bottle!

humptydumpty Sun 31-Dec-17 12:56:26

In my experience shopping just for myself is much less than half what I spend on myself and adult DD, which is around £100 pw I think.

GrammaH Sun 31-Dec-17 12:48:58

We have a Tesco delivery once a fortnight & the average spend for this during 2017 has been £130, so £65 per week for the 2 of us. The shop includes toiletries & cleaning products, some meat, occasional bottles of wine but little veg as we grow a lot in the garden. We buy a whole lamb occasionally for the freezer And I buy a few favourites from Lidl - their luxury muesli is superb & DH loves their porridge. I cook everything from scratch & am keen on the cheaper cuts such as brisket & breast of lamb as, cooked properly, they can be even tastier than the dearer cuts. I'm not trying to save money but I don't see the necessity to go overboard &, to me, £120 per week seems an awful lot. I do find online shopping does stop unnecessary buying- we don't need lots of biscuits, crisps & chocolates!! - and I like the alerts given when any of my favourites are on special offer. Anyway, I hate crowded supermarkets & I can't imagine why anyone goes there if they don't have to. Apart from anything else, I just love having my shopping carried into the house & put on the kitchen table!

Cubagran Sun 31-Dec-17 12:05:02

About £85 for two including wine, cleaning stuff, toiletries and a few bits and bobs of general household stuff. Draw out cash of about £70 -£100 a week, put some aside for newspaper bill and window cleaner, GDs' pocket money, and £20 into Christmas saving money. I find I have about £1000 to spend on Christmas by December so don't have to worry about presents etc.

SunnySusie Sun 31-Dec-17 11:47:17

We average £130 per week for two of us, which includes all our food, beer, household cleaning and washing products, plus most toiletries and things like paper for the printer, vitamin pills and socks and underwear. We tend to only drink wine at weekends or when friends visit and buy that at Majestic so it isnt included in the weekly shop. I do usually top up with salad in the local Co-op just because the date life on perishables means they dont last the week, but I rarely spend more than a fiver.

Carolpaint Sun 31-Dec-17 11:29:33

Have a £29,000 income in retirement. As a single house hold draw £70 cash to spend on housekeeping. Have friends round for food quite a lot. Do make all food from scratch, a whole chicken will make about 8 portions of Chicken Saag, lots to pop away in two portion tubs, take advantage of reductions in Waitrose, Lidl is great for fresh fruit and veg. Do things like Cassoulet, or Cereliac Soup?Buy shampoo and cleaning stuff from Poundland or your local chemists, our does a £1 selection, good quality shampoos and deodorants. Milk is separate from the Milkman, including Jersey Milk. Wherever you go take advantage of reductions, last evening Sainsburys had pints of double cream for 10p, with two lemons this will make 6 lemon possets, to die for, to share with friends. Shop for bargains early evening, then you escape the crush can shop with a clear head. Always buy the real luxury items you and guests will love, no poor fare. People love to come to eat at my house but they bring the booze as I hardly drink, so none of my £70 is alcohol, even boyfriend brings Jamiesons for his nightcap when he frequently stays over, as I do at his, he puts on good food too.

sarahellenwhitney Sun 31-Dec-17 11:11:05

bluebelle
Doubling up by 100% shockas you have shown when there are two not one is OTT .When one observes the obesity, of concern to the NHS, around us then I am not surprised. We need to eat to live not live to eat.

maryhoffman37 Sun 31-Dec-17 11:10:02

About £120 per week for two here too. But we also get an organic vegebox at about £15 and ofyen have to pop to the local Morrisons for the odd thing.