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How to save at the grocery store as food inflation continues to soar

Grocery prices were up 11% in December compared with a year ago

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Jim Dandy reads the grocery store flyers every week.

It’s a habit the 79-year-old retiree picked up in childhood and continued while raising three children during law school.

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“I learned the importance of saving five cents, and that has stuck with me,” Dandy said in an interview from his home in Niagara Falls, Ont.

Grocery prices were up 11 per cent in December compared with a year ago, Statistics Canada said this week. Overall, grocery prices were up 9.8 per cent in 2022 compared with a year earlier — the fastest pace since 1981.

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As shoppers grapple with spiralling food costs, some are turning for the first time to tips and tricks long used by older Canadians.

Dandy, a septuagenarian who lived through the skyrocketing inflation of the early 1980s, has advice to offer consumers who may be worried about food prices for the first time.

His top tip is to read grocery store flyers regularly to become familiar with prices.

You need to know how to spot a deal

Jim Dandy

“You need to know how to spot a deal,” Dandy said. “Sometimes the sales aren’t as good as they seem.”

In addition to the paper version of supermarket flyers, shoppers can also find them online or using an app on their phone.

“Flyers remain a tried-and-true way to save money on groceries,” said Natasha Macmillan, director of everyday banking at Ratehub.ca. “Even if it isn’t a store where you normally shop, it’s good to know what’s on sale and then use price matching.”

Price matching — when a grocery store matches a sale price advertised by another store — is a method Dandy said he uses regularly.

“Most supermarkets will price match as long as they’re the same (product),” he said. “The savings do really add up.”

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Flyers remain a tried-and-true way to save money on groceries

Natasha Macmillan

Dandy also recommends making a shopping list — and sticking to it.

While the senior is only shopping for himself — keeping the list fairly straightforward — Macmillan said families may want to plan meals before starting their list.

“I personally start with a meal plan for the week and then figure out what ingredients we need,” she said. “From there I check what’s already in my kitchen and make a list of what I’m missing.”

Meanwhile, there are options now available to shoppers that weren’t around in the early 1980s.

For example, people who have trouble sticking to a list when shopping for groceries in person could consider ordering groceries online, Macmillan said.

For in-store shoppers, she recommends looking at items above and below eye level.

“The higher-priced items tend to be right at eye level, whereas the cheaper brands are higher and lower on the shelf,” Macmillan said.

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Dandy also pointed out that many grocery stores will advertise a price if a shopper buys multiple of the same item, but if a household can’t consume that much of the product before the best before date then it could just go to waste.

“I’m a senior and I live alone, so these deals don’t work for me,” he said.

However, even though grocery stores advertise the price of two items purchased together, sometimes the unit price for one is the same as buying multiples.

He has also noticed shrinkflation sweeping store shelves as food makers sell smaller product sizes at the same or a higher price.

“Most stores have the unit price on the sticker and if not I’ll calculate it myself,” Dandy said. “To my sheer amazement sometimes the bulk size is more expensive, so it’s worth checking.”

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