Try GOLD - Free

‘£98! At Aldi!’

The Independent

|

October 17, 2025

As food inflation soars in the UK, social media fills with shoppers reacting with disbelief and despair. Hannah Twiggs finds out how families are reshaping their habits in response

- Hannah Twiggs

‘£98! At Aldi!’

A few years ago, £100 would fill a trolley.

Now it barely fills a basket. Across social media, shoppers are posting photos of their groceries with captions somewhere between disbelief and despair. The so-called “£100 weekly shop” - once shorthand for a manageable middle-class routine - has become a symbol of how far our money no longer goes. What’s replaced it is far more chaotic: bulk-buys, frozen finds, endless top-ups and a growing sense that food shopping has turned from a domestic ritual into an act of survival.

For Kimberley Coke, a working mum of two in Hertfordshire, the notion of a single weekly shop now feels impossible. “Our routine has changed as we’re out so much with busy family commitments and kids’ football,” she says - she commutes to London while her husband works in the next town over. “The food shop is sporadic for four. We tend to do one massive, expensive shop a month, but then we’re constantly playing top-up.”

“I tend to shop at Sainsbury’s but do top-up shops at Aldi and Asda and get frozen stuff for the kids at the Food Warehouse,” she explains. “They do a good, healthy frozen protein range, which lasts for ages in the freezer.” Even Costco, once her way to stock up and save, can backfire: “It’s amazing for bulk shopping - high quality and super nice stuff. But, God, I end up spending a few hundred pounds in a flash!”

What Coke describes mirrors a wider national trend. According to the British Retail Consortium (BRC), families are returning to a hybrid routine of smaller weekly “big” shops followed by multiple top-ups.

MORE STORIES FROM The Independent

The Independent

The Independent

ON THIS DAY

1893: The Independent Labour Party was formed by Keir Hardie.

time to read

1 min

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Sorry, trolls, autistic Barbie may be Mattel's best doll yet

From Barbie dolls with wheelchairs, canes, prosthetic legs and hearing aids; to blind Barbies and dolls with Down syndrome and type 1 diabetes - plus a Ken doll with vitiligo - playing with toys has come a long, long way since I last had a ragtag bunch of Barbie, Sindy and Jem dolls in the 1980s.

time to read

3 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

WIRED AND HIRED

As recruitment teams are increasingly turning to elaborate AI-assisted screening techniques to find staff, Helen Coffey gets quizzed by an avatar and ponders the wider implications

time to read

8 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

‘Port Talbot Pompeii’ find stuns archaeological team

Experts ‘strike gold’ with largest Roman villa discovery

time to read

3 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Zahawi 'begged for peerage before defecting to Reform

Controversial former Tory chancellor Nadhim Zahawi has defected to Reform UK after apparently unsuccessfully “begging” to be nominated for a peerage.

time to read

4 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Mitigation hearing starts in trial of Hong Kong activist

Supporters of Jimmy Lai had queued for days outside court

time to read

4 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Trump is playing with fire by attacking the Federal Reserve

Donald Trump says he did not know about the US Department of Justice’s threatened criminal prosecution of Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell.

time to read

3 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

NICE AND TOASTY

Rachael Penn snuggles up to the top electric heaters

time to read

11 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

Should we explore Japan by car on our September trip?

Q We are planning a five-week trip to Japan in September. Bullet trains are the quickest way to get between major cities. However, in less populated areas, transport seems more difficult. As they drive on the same side of the road as us, we are thinking of hiring a car. Do you have any thoughts on this?

time to read

1 mins

January 13, 2026

The Independent

The Independent

What will former top Tory bring to his new party?

Former cabinet minister Nadhim Zahawi is the latest prominent Conservative to defect to Reform UK - to the obvious delight of its leader, Nigel Farage. Much is made of Zahawi’s expertise and experience, and he claims that he humbly wishes to be a “foot soldier” in Farage’s army because “we can all see that our beautiful, ancient, kind, magical island story has reached a dark and dangerous chapter”.

time to read

3 mins

January 13, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size