Yes, we spend a lot on food but most of it is really high quality and from within 100 miles. The most convenient grocery in Burlington is City Market Co-op, which has the largest sales volume of any single-store food co-op in the country. That's probably skewing the data.
Park Slope Food Co-op in Brooklyn claims the largest sales volume for a food co-op at over $50 million per year. It's impressive that Burlington's is in that same range, given the relative sizes of the populations served. The US needs a lot more of these.
Food in Hawaii is significantly more expensive than the rest of the US, and always has been, due to the shipping cost for all sorts of staple goods that aren’t produced in volume locally. Most famously, milk.
I don’t think “healthy eating” has explanatory power here.
Houston (rather how nice of a place is to live) is probably one of the best kept secrets in the US. Despite some of the well-known shortcomings, mostly related to extreme weather events, for the most part is a kind, diverse, healthy and all in all super friendly place for new comers. Food is awesome and being lucky enough to have a good paying job, things like rent or groceries are incredibly affordable, esp. when comparing to neighboring cities (I’m personally in love with Austin but living there has plenty of issues too).
A bit outside Philly. Over the past several years, we've average $275-300 month per person for two adults. Another $100 month per person eating out. It's a bit tough to tell if they estimate buying a preselected set of food items? Do these costs reflect regional preferences at all?
My wife and I spent multiple thousands on food (groceries + restaurants) in May, and managed to bring that down by about half (though still well over a thousand) in June.
We live in semi-rural Arkansas, so not a HCOL area by any means.
How do you spend so little?! Why would you? I grew up outside of Philly, so I happen to know a bit about your area, and it's much more urban than where I live now.
I think it’s more expensive in Seattle because we have a lot of high quality food stores. Food in the us is too cheap, it should be more expensive everywhere
So much hate for this. I think people in the US don’t realize how cheap food is here compared to the rest of the world partially because we use unsustainable farming practices and because we tend to eat pretty unhealthy food.
burlesona|4 years ago
dmarlow|4 years ago
unknown|4 years ago
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siegbenn|4 years ago
Yes, we spend a lot on food but most of it is really high quality and from within 100 miles. The most convenient grocery in Burlington is City Market Co-op, which has the largest sales volume of any single-store food co-op in the country. That's probably skewing the data.
kiliantics|4 years ago
hoppyhoppy2|4 years ago
Maybe Hawaii and Vermont, which are some of the healthiest states, look expensive because people there buy more fresh produce and organic food.
They only used data for the most populous city in each state. Weird.
burlesona|4 years ago
I don’t think “healthy eating” has explanatory power here.
mbroncano|4 years ago
neogodless|4 years ago
hoppyhoppy2|4 years ago
Yes, they just used food spending data for the largest city in each state. No effort to standardize anything, as far as I can tell.
TameAntelope|4 years ago
We live in semi-rural Arkansas, so not a HCOL area by any means.
How do you spend so little?! Why would you? I grew up outside of Philly, so I happen to know a bit about your area, and it's much more urban than where I live now.
xyst|4 years ago
User23|4 years ago
rdtwo|4 years ago
rdtwo|4 years ago