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Cheapest supermarket in February: has Aldi beaten Lidl?

We reveal whether Aldi or Lidl was the cheapest supermarket overall - as well as which is the supermarket to beat for the lowest-priced big shop

Aldi was the UK's cheapest supermarket in February – beating Lidl's loyalty prices by £1.87.

We compared the prices of 100 popular grocery items and found that both Aldi and Lidl (with and without loyalty prices) were cheaper than shopping at Asda, Tesco with a Clubcard or Sainsbury's with a Nectar card.

Read on to find out where was priciest, plus how the supermarkets compared for a much bigger list of 206 products.

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Aldi prices beat Lidl Plus 

Throughout February, we checked the prices of 100 popular branded and own-brand groceries, including Hovis sliced bread, milk and cheese, at eight of the UK's biggest supermarkets to see how they compared.

The chart shows how much our shopping cost on average:

SupermarketAverage price for 100 items
Aldi£182.64
Lidl (with Lidl Plus)£184.51
Lidl (without Lidl Plus)£184.94
Asda£201.85
Tesco (with Clubcard)£205.31
Tesco (without Clubcard) £212.54
Morrisons (with More card)£212.98


Aldi was the cheapest overall for our shop, beating rival discounter Lidl by £1.87 if you had a Lidl Plus card, or £2.30 if not. 

The next cheapest was Asda, which doesn't offer loyalty prices in the same way as the others. It was 11% more than Aldi for our shopping list.

Shopping at Tesco without a loyalty card was still cheaper than shopping at Morrisons and Sainsbury's with one.

Sainsbury's was running Nectar price promotions on 27 items on our list, while Tesco had Clubcard prices on 23. Meanwhile, Morrisons had nine More card discounts on items in our basket and Lidl had three items on our list on loyalty discount. 

Waitrose also offers some loyalty prices to members, but there were none for items on our shopping list this month. It was the priciest supermarket again this month, averaging £245.79 – that's £63.15 (or 35%) more than Aldi.

What about a bigger shopping list? 

When we looked at a much larger selection (206 items), including more branded groceries, there were bigger savings with the loyalty schemes. 

Asda came out cheapest for this for the second month in a row, beating Tesco Clubcard again.

Tesco with a Clubcard – which had loyalty prices on 88 of the items – was the second cheapest, followed by Sainsbury's with Nectar and Morrisons with More.

Waitrose was most expensive again, at £585.10 - 14% more than Asda. 

We couldn't include Aldi or Lidl here as they didn't stock all the branded items on our list.

SupermarketAverage price for 206 items
Asda£512.30
Tesco (with Clubcard)£515.30
Sainsbury's (with Nectar)
£525.39
Morrisons (with More card)£530.22
Morrisons (without More card)£543.40
Tesco (without Clubcard)
£553.91
Ocado£554.72


You'll pay a lot more if you stock up at Morrisons, Sainsbury's or Tesco without a loyalty card.

For shoppers without a Nectar card, Sainsbury's was the second-most expensive after Waitrose. 

  • Interested in more than just price? Shoppers have rated product quality, customer service, online deliveries and more to reveal the best and worst supermarkets.

How much of a discount do loyalty cards give?

Based on our smaller list of products, having a loyalty card would save an average of 0.2% at Lidl, 1.1% at Morrisons, 3.4% at Tesco and 5.2% at Sainsbury's over the month.

For our longer list, which included more branded groceries and a bigger selection of items with loyalty discounts, the savings were much more substantial – 2.4% at Morrisons, 7% at Tesco and 8% at Sainsbury's.

But you'd save even more money by switching to Aldi. 

The discounts offered by loyalty cards may sound good. But only if you can access them. Our research has found millions of people can't access loyalty promotions because they're not eligible to join supermarket member schemes due to their age, lack of address or difficulties with digital access. 

We think some supermarkets could do more to ensure certain groups of shoppers, such as those without a smartphone or those who are under 18, can access – or know how they can access – loyalty prices.

Asda back on top form

Asda was the cheapest of the traditional supermarkets for both our shorter and longer shopping lists.

This is the first month our cheapest supermarket analysis will reflect any changes since Asda stopped its Aldi and Lidl price matching scheme at the end of January.

The supermarket, which saw sales fall in the run-up to Christmas, has instead claimed to have cut the prices of more than 4,000 products in-store and online by an average of 25%.

It looks to have worked, with Asda coming in £3 less than Tesco with a Clubcard for our longer shopping list and £3.46 less for our shorter list. It was still £19.21 more than Aldi, though.

How Which? compares supermarket prices

We check the prices of hundreds of grocery items at eight major supermarkets, using an independent price comparison website. 

For each supermarket, we work out the average price of each item across the month, then add those up to get each store’s average price. 

Our shopping list comprises the country’s most popular and widely available groceries, based on extensive market analysis. 

It includes branded items such as Cathedral City cheddar and Hellmann's mayonnaise, as well as own-brand products such as potatoes and baked beans. 

Own-brand items won’t be identical across supermarkets, but we’ve ensured everything we’ve compared is as similar as possible based on several factors, including quality and weight. 

We include special offers but not multibuy discounts. 

We are only able to take into account loyalty prices that apply to all members of a scheme (where there's one price on the shelf for shoppers with a loyalty card and another for those without). Currently, this type of two-tier pricing is used at Lidl, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, Tesco and Waitrose. 

We are unable to include discounts that are personalised to selected members, and we can’t factor in points or other rewards as these vary from customer to customer and don't always have a quantifiable monetary value.