Affordable Food For All

Our Affordable Food For All campaign launched just over a year ago as the country was facing the worst cost of living crisis in a generation.

Affordable Food for All logo

Our campaign

Millions of families are skipping meals to survive the cost of living crisis. With the price of essential products remaining high, supermarkets have a crucial role to play to help us all. While some supermarkets have taken action to support their customers, we’re calling on all supermarkets to take action so that everyone has access to budget ranges that enable healthy choices, especially in convenience stores.

Your incredible support

Since then, more than 113,000 people have signed our petition urging supermarkets to take action. As a result, two major supermarkets have committed to helping people who rely on convenience stores by increasing the availability of budget ranges in these stores.

Our achievements

  • Morrisons and Sainsbury’s introduced dozens of budget-range items at hundreds of their convenience stores nationwide. 
  • Tesco also introduced over 50 cheaper alternative products at thousands of its convenience stores. 
  • The government has vowed to make unit pricing on groceries clearer by changing the law. 
  • The Competition and Markets Authority has announced an inquiry into loyalty pricing after Which? research found that not all loyalty card deals are as good as they seem.
  • Tesco will now display unit pricing on Clubcard offers both online and in-store, which will help their customers compare prices and find the best deal. 

The future

We expect supermarkets to go further for shoppers as high food prices continue to hit consumers. Expanding access to budget-range options that support healthy choices in smaller stores would allow millions to make savings by switching to cheaper products. 


Supermarkets must also respond quickly to come into line with new government rules around unit pricing, to ensure that they’re doing everything they can to help their customers find the best deal. They should also take stock of the Competition and Markets Authority’s ongoing investigation into loyalty pricing, and work to address any concerns the regulator may have. 

On the hunt for budget lines

Which?’s own Harry Kind went to a couple of convenience stores in Peterborough to investigate first-hand the difference it makes to your wallet when you have access to budget lines for a weekly shop

Supermarkets must do more to help shoppers

Which major supermarkets have answered our calls to stock budget ranges in smaller stores?

Morrisons logo

Morrisons

Morrisons has rolled out budget ranges in its convenience stores.


✅ Wide-ranging
✅ Affordable
✅ Easy to find

black and white Tesco logo

Tesco

Tesco, you’ve taken some action, but remember, ‘Every Little Helps’!


❌ Wide-ranging
❌ Affordable
❌ Easy to find

Sainsbury's logo

Sainsbury's

Sainsbury's has started rolling out budget ranges in its convenience stores. 


🔄 Wide-ranging
✅ Affordable
✅ Easy to find

black and white Asda logo

Asda

Asda, make your new stores work for everyone.


❌ Wide-ranging
❌ Affordable
❌ Easy to find

Supermarkets should urgently stock budget line items across their convenience stores, prioritising areas most in need. These should be:


  • Wide-ranging: Have a sufficient range of essential budget items on offer that support a healthy diet
  • Affordable: Prices that make a real difference to people’s pockets
  • Easy to find: Consistently available and easy to spot in store

Small supermarkets fail to stock essential budget items

Our research reveals low-cost food ranges are not available to lower-income households relying on small supermarkets.

Our latest advice

Take control of your trolley with our latest advice

Consumers looking at food prices in supermarket


From discounts for over-60s and free kids’ meals, to Healthy Start vouchers and price cuts, here’s what supermarkets and shops are doing to help with the cost of living.


Take a closer look at whether frozen items can help you cut your grocery bills.


Find the cheapest supermarket in the UK based on our exclusive supermarket price comparison.


Discover how Nectar, Tesco Clubcard, Boots Advantage and other popular loyalty cards compare – and how to get the most out of them


Uncover the best time to grab ‘yellow sticker’ bargains at your local supermarket.

Money-saving tips

The ten point action plan for supermarkets

We’ve launched a ten point plan that urges supermarkets to do more to support customers through the cost of living crisis. It outlines ways supermarkets can support people, particularly those who are struggling the most

1. Make unit pricing prominent, legible and consistent in-store and online so price comparisons are easy across different brands and sizes of packaging.


2. Provide clear unit pricing for promotional offers in-store and online so that people can work out whether they really are the best deal.


3. Provide a basic range of essential budget lines for affordable as well as healthy everyday choices that are available across stores, but particularly in locations where people most need support.


4. Consider adapting minimum spend requirements and other ways that online deliveries can be more cost-effective to increase options for households in areas with poor supermarket access.


5. Tailor marketing budgets and promotions, including through loyalty cards, vouchers and other offers, to support people where they are most likely to be struggling.


6. Promote the uptake of the Healthy Start and Best Start foods scheme, with a particular focus on the priority local areas where there is a low level of uptake.


7. Provide additional support or ‘top ups’ where people are able to be identified as in particular need – for example linking them to the healthy start or best start foods schemes and other targeted promotions.


8. Offer straightforward price reductions rather than multi-buy offers that require a bigger initial spend, may lead to more food waste and can make it more difficult to eat healthily.


9. Make available more promotions for healthy and sustainable foods, including fruit and vegetables, building on evidence of where promotions drive effective outcomes (eg. 60p fruit and vegetables).


10. Underpin these actions by promotions, recipes and advice that make lower priced, healthy and sustainable foods tasty and appealing to the breadth of communities that are served.

See our progress

Here's the history of our campaign: