Login

Forgot password? Cart My cart (0 items)
Font size: A- A+
Become a Member FREE

Become a GrownUp and join our Community. Stay up to date with our weekly newsletter, discuss topics with other members, grab some great member-only offers and so much more.

Register Free Now!
Notices
Tell Friends & Family about GrownUps
Tell Friends & Family about GrownUps
Introduce others to a new world, online.
Radiance Supplements for Life
Radiance Supplements for Life
Expert Health Tips, Articles and Advice
Join the Vitality Community!
Join the Vitality Community!
Our aim is to be your guide to living life to the full!
Who are the Globus Family of Brands?
Who are the Globus Family of Brands?
Read the story of one of the largest tour & river cruise operators in the world.
List your Classified
List your Classified
House Sitters, Employment, For Sale, Property & Personals
Chat with other Members
Chat with other Members
Click on the blue banner on the top right hand side of the page!
Compare & Purchase Insurance products
Disclaimer: GrownUps is not an Insurance Broker. We do not make recommendations on any financial services products. Always seek suitable advice.
R50 Sexual Health
R50 Sexual Health
Check out the new section available to everyone.
Recipes
Recipes
Find some delicious recipes by clicking here.

Vote in our Polls

How is your hearing?

Category sponsor
« Previous Article Next Article »

Brandless Bargains

Rating:
Sign in to rate this article!

 Read more Oily Rag articles by Frank and Muriel Newman 

We recently headed off to our local supermarket armed with a calculator and notepad (standard issue for oily rag shoppers) to see how much shoppers can save buying generic unbranded products instead of the named brands. The results were staggering, but first let’s explain a little about unbranded products.

It’s not quite true to say generic products are unbranded because they are usually sold under a supermarket brand name. The Progressive owned supermarkets (Foodtown, Countdown and Woolworths) use Home Brand and Signature while Foodstuff outlets (Pak N Save, New World and Four Square) use Pams and Budget.

We selected a shopping basket of 20 everyday items - the things nearly everyone put into their trolley. Our shopping list included: spaghetti, diced tinned tomatoes, toilet paper, dishwashing liquid, baked beans, biscuits (ginger nuts), sugar, flour, dog food, cat food, milk, rice bubbles, rice, tinned peaches, vinegar, cooking oil, ice cream cones, cheese, tea bags, and eggs. We placed the best-known brand in one basket and in the other we placed the house brand equivalent, and then headed to the checkout to see the difference. And there really was quite a difference.

In every case the house brand was cheaper. Five were more than half the cost. Vinegar was 56% cheaper, spaghetti 55%, baked beans 55% dishwashing liquid 52%, and cat food 50%. The average saving across all twenty items was 36%! In other words, the basket of unbranded products was more than a third cheaper.

For the average family, that adds up to a significant saving. Those spending about $250 a week on groceries could easily save $50 a week by switching to house brands, which adds up to $2,600 a year. For many people that’s like an $80 a week pay rise! If you use that money to repay your mortgage the savings would grow to hundreds of thousands of dollars over the lifetime of the loan.

The crazy thing is, in many cases the only difference between the branded and unbranded product was the packaging and label! It was the very same product in both, that came off the same production line.

We were not surprised to discover the big difference between branded and un-branded products. Branded products are heavily promoted. Promotion is expensive, and each can of beans, box of tissues or whatever carries part of that cost.

The message is clear. Buy house brands.


The other thing to be a little wary of is thinking buying bigger is cheaper, as a member of the oily rag club discovered when buying flour. They compared the cost of 5kg and 1.5kg bags of house brand flour and found it was 10 cents cheaper per kg to buy the smaller bag. Just goes to show sometimes buying in bulk is not cheaper!

Do you buy house brands? Have you noticed any difference in the quality of the product? Send in your comments via the oily rag website (www.oilyrag.co.nz) or write to Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag, PO Box 984, Whangarei.

* Frank and Muriel Newman are the authors of Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag in NZ. Readers can submit their oily rag tips on-line at www.oilyrag.co.nz. The book is available from bookstores and online at www.oilyrag.co.nz.

 

Print | Bookmark

Explore This Topic Further

This article is part of the Oily Rag topic. Below are more articles in this topic.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Add a comment

Please do not include any links or html in your comment as the
comment will be rejected automatically.

Name:

 

Join GrownUps Free
By becoming a GrownUps member and part of the Community, you gain access to:
  • Enter Competitions
  • Go into regular prize draws
  • Play daily games
  • Join Discussion Groups
  • Find like-minded individuals and create lasting friendships
  • Receive special GrownUps offers and
  • Add you own articles of interest, recipes, pictures for fellow members to read and view.
All for FREE! So why not join now?

Register Now
Enter GrownUps CompetitionsJoin our Chat RoomFind Friends on GrownUpsHealth Supplements Sponsor - RadianceCoach Tour Sponsor - GlobusCoast FM

site links