The cost of healthy living (UK)

Has anybody else noticed since having a healthier lifestyle that the food shop is now much more expensive?
Is it just me or is it cheaper to be unhealthy than it is to be healthy?
When my husband and I had a porr diet our weekly shop was about £50.00 now it's more like £90.00!
Fruit, veg, meat, fish - the prices are astronomical!
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Replies

  • blazeybug87
    blazeybug87 Posts: 226 Member
    For me not really,

    At first I looked at my shopping receipt and suddenly felt a little lightheaded but then I took into account...

    Friday and Saturday nights, either involved a takeaway or going out to socialise (always involved food) - at least £30
    Buying readymade lunches at work every week - about £30 per week

    It does work out cheaper in the long run but the first few shops where you are building up your stockpile it can sting a little :)


    That being said - I watched a show on Youtube called My Big Fat Diet Show or something similiar and it highlighted how most of the shops offers are on crap food thus promoting obesity.
  • AirCircleI
    AirCircleI Posts: 334 Member
    My OH and I manage on £40-£50 a week. I find eating healthy to be cheaper, mostly because we don't eat out or drink as much, which saves LOADS. I do the weekly shop at Tesco online, which makes it easy to shop based on deals - they delivery, and we use it for all canned goods (and always get tesco value brand - saves LOADS), all staples and anything heavy, and meats (we always get a chicken and after roasting, it covers several meals). For meats we just go with what is on discount.

    try this: http://www.mysupermarket.co.uk/ It allows you to compare grocery store prices and makes suggestions for cheaper things.

    Because we are on a budget, we always go for value stuff and never are able to do things like organic/free range, but otherwise, we eat healthy and cheap.

    But I never get fruit and veg from grocery stores, it is much cheaper from local markets/shops.
  • Princess_Sameen
    Princess_Sameen Posts: 284 Member
    Really?! how do you make your shopping cheaper?!
    would love to know.......
    mine is about £80! Any tips to reduce the amount ? :flowerforyou:
  • Bobby_Clerici
    Bobby_Clerici Posts: 1,828 Member
    If you buy processed "health food", yes, it's expensive.
    I try to stick with lean meats, whole grains, low fat dairy, nuts, fruits and veggies which turn out to be less expensive in the end.
    Just keep it simple.:glasses:
  • Thanks all!

    We generally buy Tesco value too but with the amount of protein we eat it seems like chicken/turkey alone can be £10.00 per week.

    Throw in things like tinned mackerel and salmon fillets and the prices just rockets.
  • yarwell
    yarwell Posts: 10,477 Member
    cheap crap does tend to be crap.
  • princessruthiebelle
    princessruthiebelle Posts: 165 Member
    depends where you shop i guess??

    agree with the poster who commented about takeaways ect... ive saved money even just buy not 'treating' yself everytime i go in a shop so chocolate or whatever!!

    do you shop around? shops ike aldi are much cheaper than tesco or sainsburys and especially with fruit and veg there isnt any difference!!

    better yet go to a locally run market or green grocer the quaity is usually much better and the prices tend to be cheaper (in my experience)
    again see what the prices are like in the butchers shop or fishmonger?

    hey if ur gonna go crazy you could grow your own??

    if you are still insistent on just going to the supermarket maybe try online shopping so you can compare prices? store own brand are a great way to cut the cost and most of the time you literally are just paying for the name!!

    when you are feeling flush maybe try bulk buying things like pasta. things that will save and that you will eat regularly. i watch a programme on channel 4 (uk) which i bet you could still find online (4oD and Youtube both do) called Super Scrimpers. On there weekly buying one a small bag of pasta (same with things like loo roll and tea bags) rather than stocking up on a large one, say every 2 months, meant you were spending something like 4 times as much?? i cant remember exactly how much but it was silly money!!

    make sure you stick to a list!! it may be nice to try out all the exciting exotic dried fruits but if you wont or dont need to eat them you could be costing yourslef extra money and calories! try to plan your weeks meals and snacks!!


    me and mum have had a rough time in the past where we didnt have the luxury of money! one week we fed ourselves and the dog and the budgie on £20 including loo roll and shower gels! it was hard and we were struggling by the end of the week! im not saying anyone needs to do this but it proves it can be done!

    i work in a supermarket and if i go on the tills people spend far too much money on things they clearly dont need! they always gasp when i tell them the total! try going in with no wallet just however much cash you wish to spend?? if you go over ask the assistant to take things off the bill?

    shoppers get set in there ways! supermarkets set out the shelves so you buy what they want you to! go in alret and ready to bargain hunt!!
  • Anonymou5
    Anonymou5 Posts: 92
    Hmm, frozen vegetables for a week - £6-10
    Mince meat - £5 (1kg)
    Frozen Assorted Chicken Portions (1kg) - £3
    Sandwhich steaks (2 packs of 5) - £5.80
    Potatoes - £3
    Rice - £2
    Gravy granules - £0.50
    Sauces (occasional purchase) - £3
    Sausages - (£4)
    Eggs - £2
    Oatmeal - £1

    Don't seem too bad to me! (that's for 2 peeps)
  • broxi1979
    broxi1979 Posts: 30
    It depends, I buy my meats & chicken fillets in bulk from a farm shop, much higher quality and they come in at just under £1 each. One of those is more than adequate for a main meal, they are not like the little anaemic things the supermarket sell.

    For veg I buy bags of frozen stuff, it's cheap and often retains more of the nutrients than the "fresh" stuff. Fresh veg I buy a couple of heads of broccoli.

    I buy packet brown rice for my carbs, you can often find the Tilda stuff on offer for £1/packet ... just bulk buy it when it's offer, ordinary rice, cous cous and savoury rice are also very cheap.

    The most expensive part is the fish, tuna is OK if you go for the cheaper brands but the fresh salmon, etc that the supermarkets sells is ridiculously priced ... £5 for a 100g packet of smoked salmon!!

    Fruit can also be expensive but I don't eat too much of it these days.

    So tips on cheaper living, find a good butcher or farm shop for meats and eggs, buy frozen veg and maybe find a fishmonger for fish if that's a part of your diet. Bulk buy on other things like cereal that will keep when you see it on offer. I tend to buy 2-3 boxes of muesli or oats at a time and store it in plastic cereal containers.
  • If you go to lidl it's not that costly.
  • MissCheese
    MissCheese Posts: 195 Member
    There is no doubt that buying fresh fruit, vegetables and meats in the UK is expensive. I get through a punnet of Rasps, Strawbs and Blueberries every other day and at £2 per punnet (marked as half price I might add!!!) it isn't cheap. Yes I could buy frozen but I prefer the texture of fresh fruits, especially berries.

    I have given up drinking so have removed that cost from my budget and I don't often eat out anymore. It was an almost nightly occurence before I decided to change my lifestyle so I am saving pennies there.

    I do find I have more money at the end of the month now because of the changes I've made so although the items I am buying are more expensive my overall budget has gone down. I haven't examined it fully though.

    I hate seeing all the rubbish food and alcohol advertised for very marked down prices on the TV. It seems even worse now that the Euro Championship is on.

    I do know that after 7 months I wouldn't want to go back to the way I was even if it were cheaper. I have more energy, a good complexion and dare I say it look a little younger! Oh and I'm 47 lbs lighter.
  • amy1612
    amy1612 Posts: 1,356 Member
    I find it ok, especially if I go to the market and get veg there. I got a huge bag of veg for £15 last week with all sorts in. Try planning meals...lentils are a good,cheap filling thing...you can make soups for lunch, etc. Aldi is really good for fruit and veg deals too :)

    Oh and Broxi, to save more money...buy a large bag of brown rice, cook it, and rinse it immediately in cold water until cool, thn you can store it in the fridge/freezer in containers and either heat it or have it cold in a salad. Much cheaper.
  • ironanimal
    ironanimal Posts: 5,922 Member
    cheap crap does tend to be crap.
    For once I agree with yarwell.

    You can save money by shopping around if you're buying at the supermarket - Sainsburys is where I usually get my meat, Morrisons is better for fruit and veg - at least in my area. Make use of our produce markets too.
  • ahamm002
    ahamm002 Posts: 1,690 Member
    Unhealthy refined processed food is incredibly cheap to produce. You spend a little on it, but the food industry makes a massive profit. Whereas, healthy foods like grass fed beef, berries, fish, organic products, etc. are all going to cost a lot more. But, the extra money you spend on healthy food will be on of the best investments you ever make.

    Fruits and veggies are usually pretty cheap to buy though!
  • blazeybug87
    blazeybug87 Posts: 226 Member
    Perhaps we should start a UK shopping group to let each other know of good offers etc?

    BTW if anyone wants to add me feel free - all of my friends so far are American, I need some local support! :D
  • Katie3784
    Katie3784 Posts: 543
    It definitely costs more to eat healthier. Our weekly bill is around $200 for a family of four, and this is not counting the one night that we eat at Chik Fil A, which adds about $25.
  • Loads of good advice here.

    I think the problem is that we don't eat staples like cereal, pasta or potatoes.

    My OH and I eat mainly salads with chicken/turkey/prawns/salmon usually twice daily so it's pretty costly.
    I try and buy frozen chicken breasts rather than fresh but that's still approx £5 per kg.

    Of course we save money because we don't go out but a healthy meal for 2 of say steamed chicken(£2) with lettuce (£1), tomatoes (50p), spring onion (50p), beetroot (50p), peppers (50p) and some feta (£1) would set us back approx £6.00. Whereas a chicken kiev with mash and beans would be about £2.50.

    I just think it's outrageous that a large pack of Doritos is £1.00 but a punnet of blueberries can be £4.00
  • Perhaps we should start a UK shopping group to let each other know of good offers etc?

    BTW if anyone wants to add me feel free - all of my friends so far are American, I need some local support! :D

    Sounsd good - add me :smile:
  • blazeybug87
    blazeybug87 Posts: 226 Member
    Loads of good advice here.

    I think the problem is that we don't eat staples like cereal, pasta or potatoes.

    My OH and I eat mainly salads with chicken/turkey/prawns/salmon usually twice daily so it's pretty costly.
    I try and buy frozen chicken breasts rather than fresh but that's still approx £5 per kg.

    Of course we save money because we don't go out but a healthy meal for 2 of say steamed chicken(£2) with lettuce (£1), tomatoes (50p), spring onion (50p), beetroot (50p), peppers (50p) and some feta (£1) would set us back approx £6.00. Whereas a chicken kiev with mash and beans would be about £2.50.

    I just think it's outrageous that a large pack of Doritos is £1.00 but a punnet of blueberries can be £4.00

    Maybe worth jumping on the Big Retailers websites and doing a bit of price comparison? Create a shopping list of 15 things that you buy all the time and see which is cheaper?

    I do this quite often...sad but true :)
  • broxi1979
    broxi1979 Posts: 30
    Oh and Broxi, to save more money...buy a large bag of brown rice, cook it, and rinse it immediately in cold water until cool, thn you can store it in the fridge/freezer in containers and either heat it or have it cold in a salad. Much cheaper.

    I really should do that, it's more laziness on my part and I was worried about it spoiling. When you make a batch, how many days do you expect to get per cook?
  • TRISTAR
    TRISTAR Posts: 105 Member
    I have noticed it's alot more expensive, but I'm having to shop around now for the best deals. I buy my skimmed milk from Lidl (at the moment of offer for 39p!), and I normally go to Sainsburys where it's 79p!

  • Maybe worth jumping on the Big Retailers websites and doing a bit of price comparison? Create a shopping list of 15 things that you buy all the time and see which is cheaper?

    I do this quite often...sad but true :)

    That's not a bad idea. We go to Tesco out of habit. We changed to Asda for a while but found that the fresh fruit and veg generally had a poor life span. I always though Sainsburys was more expensive than Tesco & Asda
  • I have noticed it's alot more expensive, but I'm having to shop around now for the best deals. I buy my skimmed milk from Lidl (at the moment of offer for 39p!), and I normally go to Sainsburys where it's 79p!

    We get our milk from our local shop. £1.00 for a huge carton :smile:
  • Linda_Darlene
    Linda_Darlene Posts: 453 Member
    Has anybody else noticed since having a healthier lifestyle that the food shop is now much more expensive?
    Is it just me or is it cheaper to be unhealthy than it is to be healthy?
    When my husband and I had a porr diet our weekly shop was about £50.00 now it's more like £90.00!
    Fruit, veg, meat, fish - the prices are astronomical!
  • Anonymou5
    Anonymou5 Posts: 92
    Loads of good advice here.

    I think the problem is that we don't eat staples like cereal, pasta or potatoes.

    My OH and I eat mainly salads with chicken/turkey/prawns/salmon usually twice daily so it's pretty costly.
    I try and buy frozen chicken breasts rather than fresh but that's still approx £5 per kg.

    Of course we save money because we don't go out but a healthy meal for 2 of say steamed chicken(£2) with lettuce (£1), tomatoes (50p), spring onion (50p), beetroot (50p), peppers (50p) and some feta (£1) would set us back approx £6.00. Whereas a chicken kiev with mash and beans would be about £2.50.

    I just think it's outrageous that a large pack of Doritos is £1.00 but a punnet of blueberries can be £4.00

    Maybe worth jumping on the Big Retailers websites and doing a bit of price comparison? Create a shopping list of 15 things that you buy all the time and see which is cheaper?

    I do this quite often...sad but true :)

    Replace breast with legs, wings etc.
  • alliegeorge
    alliegeorge Posts: 114
    Has anybody else noticed since having a healthier lifestyle that the food shop is now much more expensive?
    Is it just me or is it cheaper to be unhealthy than it is to be healthy?
    When my husband and I had a porr diet our weekly shop was about £50.00 now it's more like £90.00!
    Fruit, veg, meat, fish - the prices are astronomical!

    Not really - my family spend £100-£110 a week on healthy shopping (there's four of us); whereas my boyfriends family spend around £130ish on pretty crappy stuff & it barely lasts them the week.
  • MrsWilsoncroft
    MrsWilsoncroft Posts: 968 Member
    The thing that annoys me the most is when you go into the supermarkets & everything on offer is all junk food etc!

    I'd like it if they put more things like fruit, vegetables & meats on offer instead of crisps, cakes and high fattening meals!

    I do find I spend abit more now i eat healthy though as i am always stocking up on fresh foods now rather than buying ready meals, tins and packets etc.

    I try to shop around though, i do some shopping at Aldi and some at Asda & Sainsbury's so i can get the most of each supermarket.

    I go with a shopping list too & stick to it & also try & plan our meals ahead so i know in advance what foods we need.

    Also going into the shops late at night i pick up alot of reduced items which i can freeze.

    Stacey x
  • Loads of good advice here.

    I think the problem is that we don't eat staples like cereal, pasta or potatoes.

    My OH and I eat mainly salads with chicken/turkey/prawns/salmon usually twice daily so it's pretty costly.
    I try and buy frozen chicken breasts rather than fresh but that's still approx £5 per kg.

    Of course we save money because we don't go out but a healthy meal for 2 of say steamed chicken(£2) with lettuce (£1), tomatoes (50p), spring onion (50p), beetroot (50p), peppers (50p) and some feta (£1) would set us back approx £6.00. Whereas a chicken kiev with mash and beans would be about £2.50.

    I just think it's outrageous that a large pack of Doritos is £1.00 but a punnet of blueberries can be £4.00

    Maybe worth jumping on the Big Retailers websites and doing a bit of price comparison? Create a shopping list of 15 things that you buy all the time and see which is cheaper?

    I do this quite often...sad but true :)

    Replace breast with legs, wings etc.

    This will sound odd but i have a phobia of eating meat on the bone so thighs, wings and legs are a no go
  • skinyZ
    skinyZ Posts: 89 Member
    Hmm, frozen vegetables for a week - £6-10
    Mince meat - £5 (1kg)
    Frozen Assorted Chicken Portions (1kg) - £3
    Sandwhich steaks (2 packs of 5) - £5.80
    Potatoes - £3
    Rice - £2
    Gravy granules - £0.50
    Sauces (occasional purchase) - £3
    Sausages - (£4)
    Eggs - £2
    Oatmeal - £1

    Don't seem too bad to me! (that's for 2 peeps)

    wow! no way is that your shopping for a week!
  • amy1612
    amy1612 Posts: 1,356 Member
    Oh and Broxi, to save more money...buy a large bag of brown rice, cook it, and rinse it immediately in cold water until cool, thn you can store it in the fridge/freezer in containers and either heat it or have it cold in a salad. Much cheaper.

    I really should do that, it's more laziness on my part and I was worried about it spoiling. When you make a batch, how many days do you expect to get per cook?

    I was cooking it on Sunday night and making enough to last mon-fri :) You could do less if youre worried about it going off, but I never had an issue. :)