Iceland to offer customers ยฃ1 reward for reporting shoplifters
Supermarket chain Iceland is to offer customers a ยฃ1 reward if they spot shoplifters in the act.
The retailerโs boss, Richard Walker, said any shoppers who point out offenders to members of staff will receive a payment to their membership card.
Iceland said the business faces a roughly ยฃ20 million hit from the cost of shoplifting each year.
Mr Walker, executive chairman of Iceland, told Channel Five news that shoplifting is not a โvictimless crimeโ.
โIโd like to announce that we will give ยฃ1 to any customer who points out a shoplifter.
โWeโll put it on their bonus card, if they see any customers in our stores who is undertaking that offence.
โSome people see this as a victimless crime; it is not.
โIt also keeps prices from being lowered because it is a cost to the business.
โItโs a cost to the hours we pay our colleagues, as well as it being about intimidation and violence.โ
He said the ยฃ20 million cost of theft limits the amount that the company can pay back out to its colleague and restrains its ability to lower prices.
โWeโd like customers to help us lower our prices even more by pointing out shoplifters,โ Mr Walker added.
Last month, official figures revealed that the number of shoplifting offences recorded by police in England and Wales climbed to another record high.
Some 530,643 offences were logged in the year to March 2025, up 20% from 444,022 in 2023-24 and the highest total since current police recording practices began in 2002-03.
At the time, retail bosses warned that shop theft was spiralling out of control and that business owners need to see immediate results as ministers have pledged thousands more officers for neighbourhood policing by next spring.
Association of Convenience Stores chief executive James Lowman said the recorded figures show more crimes are being reported, but this is still โfar too lowโ, with many retailers having โno faithโ in incidents being investigated.
