Grocery price inflation eases to lowest level since April


Grocery price inflation eased back to 4% in January, its lowest level since April,ย  in some relief for households, latest figures show.

The fall from Decemberโ€™s 4.3% came as spending on supermarket own label goods accounted for 52.2% of grocery sales, the highest level recorded, according to market research firm Worldpanel by Numerator.

Spending on items on promotion rose by 10.9% year on year, marking the fastest rate of growth since October 2024, while sales of full-price products rose by just 1.7% compared to the same four weeks last year.

Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Worldpanel, said: โ€œFor most shoppers, January is all about resetting household budgets, and this year was no exception.

โ€œWhile grocery sales continue to grow and inflation eased to its lowest level in months, value remained front of mind for many, with own-label hitting a record high, accounting for more than half of all grocery spend.โ€

In January almost a quarter of shoppers (23%) sought high-protein food and 26% looked for high-fibre products, a survey for Worldpanel found.

Sales of cottage cheese were up 50% year on year, bought by 2.8 million households โ€“ about 600,000 more than last year.

Sales of fresh fruit and dried pulses were up 6% year on year, alongside fresh fish, up 5%, poultry, up 3%, and chilled yoghurt, up 4%.

So-called functional drinks, those marketed as providing health benefits such as energy, gut health or mood enhancement, were bought by 11% of households, with spending up 13% on last year.

Mr McKevitt said: โ€œIn a month when consumers typically look to rein in spending, it is notable how many are still willing to pay a premium for wellness, with functional drinks costing nearly four times as much as typical soft drinks at ยฃ4.69 per litre.โ€

Lidl was the fastest-growing bricks-and-mortar retailer, with sales up by 10.1% over the 12 weeks to January 25 compared to the same period last year.

Sales at Ocado increased by 14.1%, taking the online grocerโ€™s market share to 2.1%.

Sainsburyโ€™s saw a 5.3% rise in spending through the tills, while Tesco saw sales increase by 4.4% to take 28.7% of the market.

Waitrose achieved the fastest rise in average spending per trip among the grocers but its market share held steady at 4.7%.

Sales of grocery items at M&S were 6.9% higher compared to the same quarter last year.

Asdaโ€™s sales were down 3.7% on a year earlier, while Co-opโ€™s sales were 1.6% lower.

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