top | item 46203011

(no title)

dottjt | 2 months ago

Maybe it's different in Europe, but at least in Australia you end up paying more at smaller shops, so I tend to avoid them. Is this the case in Europe as well?

discuss

order

mrweasel|2 months ago

That probably depends on the country and what you mean by small. Smaller shops/supermarkets in Denmark tend to be cheaper, because they are run mostly as discount brands, while the larger stores a premium brands and have the more expensive options.

However, Danish supermarkets are generally kept small by regulation, meaning that there are very few supermarket that could be considered big by international standards.

ant6n|2 months ago

For a first world country, Germany has ridiculously low food prices. These are found at the chain supermarkets (Aldi, Lidl, etc.). They tend to be small by American big box standards (perhaps 1000sqm, so maybe 3x the size of a bodega). There's a lot of these supermarkets everywhere in the country, most people can easily come across them during usual daily trips.

simgt|2 months ago

Yes shops in dense urban areas are overall more expensive but there are discount stores like Lidl too. For higher quality products the difference is marginal (if you can even find an equivalent in a big suburban store). Having experienced both, my feeling is that it evens out if you account for the running cost of a car used often or delivery.

londons_explore|2 months ago

Yes - groceries in a small shop are easily 2x the £/calorie in the UK compared to a big superstore.

adamc|2 months ago

I would think the sensitivity to this would depend a lot on family size. Shopping for just myself... it doesn't matter much. Shopping for a family of 4 would be very different.

simgt|2 months ago

Are you comparing the cost of strictly identical products or something else? I'd be very curious to have some sources if you have any