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Are you noticing significant "Shrinkflation" in your local stores lately?
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Hi everyone,
I've been tracking grocery prices at my local stores lately, and I'm honestly frustrated by how often I find products where the price stays the same, but the net weight or quantity has silently dropped. It feels like it's becoming impossible to compare "true value" anymore without pulling out a calculator in the middle of the aisle.
I'm curious—what specific items or brands have you noticed "shrinking" the most in your area recently? Are there any stores where you feel this is happening more aggressively than others?
I'd love to hear your experiences, as it's getting really difficult to keep track of what's actually a "deal" versus just a smaller package. Thanks!
I've been tracking grocery prices at my local stores lately, and I'm honestly frustrated by how often I find products where the price stays the same, but the net weight or quantity has silently dropped. It feels like it's becoming impossible to compare "true value" anymore without pulling out a calculator in the middle of the aisle.
I'm curious—what specific items or brands have you noticed "shrinking" the most in your area recently? Are there any stores where you feel this is happening more aggressively than others?
I'd love to hear your experiences, as it's getting really difficult to keep track of what's actually a "deal" versus just a smaller package. Thanks!
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What I've noticed more is ingredient downgrade. Chocolate especially. Things that used to be chocolate tasting are now just sweet. I think they replaced cocoa with sugar.
I'm more leery of stocking up unless I recently tried the product - in case they changed it, and something like a package change makes me very cautious.
What I've noticed more is ingredient downgrade. Chocolate especially. Things that used to be chocolate tasting are now just sweet. I think they replaced cocoa with sugar.
I'm more leery of stocking up unless I recently tried the product - in case they changed it, and something like a package change makes me very cautious.
I'll be on the lookout for grocery items that have gone downhill in taste. I can't think of anything off the top of my head but I can think of a lot of products that never were any good lol.
Since we are all stuck dealing with this, I'm genuinely curious: When you actually catch a brand shrinking their product (or downgrading ingredients), what do you usually do?
Do you stop buying that brand entirely and switch to a competitor?
Do you just accept it, keep buying it, and look for coupons?
Or do you wait until it's on a steep sale?
I'm trying to figure out if there's a "breaking point" where people finally say, "That's it, I'm done." What's yours?
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Since we are all stuck dealing with this, I'm genuinely curious: When you actually catch a brand shrinking their product (or downgrading ingredients), what do you usually do?
Do you stop buying that brand entirely and switch to a competitor?
Do you just accept it, keep buying it, and look for coupons?
Or do you wait until it's on a steep sale?
I'm trying to figure out if there's a "breaking point" where people finally say, "That's it, I'm done." What's yours?
I'll be on the lookout for grocery items that have gone downhill in taste. I can't think of anything off the top of my head but I can think of a lot of products that never were any good lol.
it also feels like the bars of soap are getting smaller, (don't last as long), yet getting more costly.
One thing that stands out from these comments is that many consumers seem to be frustrated not only by higher prices, but also by what feels like a decline in value. Whether it's smaller package sizes, changes in recipes, lower product quality, or paying more for something that no longer tastes the same, the common theme appears to be: "I'm paying more and getting less."
I'm curious: when you notice a product has become smaller, lower quality, or significantly more expensive, what do you do next?
Do you switch brands immediately?
Do you keep buying it because there are no good alternatives?
Do you wait for sales and coupons?
Or do you stop buying that category altogether?
I'd love to hear real examples of products you abandoned and what you replaced them with.
One thing that stands out from these comments is that many consumers seem to be frustrated not only by higher prices, but also by what feels like a decline in value. Whether it's smaller package sizes, changes in recipes, lower product quality, or paying more for something that no longer tastes the same, the common theme appears to be: "I'm paying more and getting less."
I'm curious: when you notice a product has become smaller, lower quality, or significantly more expensive, what do you do next?
Do you switch brands immediately?
Do you keep buying it because there are no good alternatives?
Do you wait for sales and coupons?
Or do you stop buying that category altogether?
I'd love to hear real examples of products you abandoned and what you replaced them with.