Supermarket Savings UK 2026 — Loyalty Cards, Cheapest Supermarkets and How to Cut Your Food Bill

Own Brand vs Branded Food UK — Is It Worth Switching?

Own-brand supermarket food is 20–40% cheaper than branded equivalents. Here's which categories are worth switching and which are genuinely different.

Branded food typically costs 20–40% more than own-brand equivalents for the same nutritional content and often comparable quality. Here is a category-by-category guide to where switching makes sense.

Category Analysis — Switch or Keep?

Product category Own-brand quality vs branded Saving on switch Recommendation
Pasta, rice, lentils, pulses Essentially identical 25–40% Switch
Tinned tomatoes, beans, chickpeas Essentially identical 20–35% Switch
Cooking oil (vegetable, sunflower) Essentially identical 20–35% Switch
Flour, sugar, salt, bicarbonate of soda Identical 20–40% Switch
Frozen peas, sweetcorn, mixed veg Essentially identical 20–35% Switch
Baked beans Very similar 40–60% Switch (or trial)
Breakfast cereal (cornflakes, porridge, bran flakes) Very similar 30–50% Switch — significant saving
Milk, butter, cream Similar 10–20% Trial
Eggs Similar 10–20% Check welfare standard — free range vs caged matters more
Cheddar cheese (standard blocks) Similar 15–25% Switch
Crisps and snacks Noticeably different 30–50% Personal preference; worth trialling
Chocolate Often different 15–30% Personal preference
Coffee (ground/instant) Often different 20–40% Trial
Bread (standard sliced) Similar 15–25% Switch
Premium branded items (biscuits, sauces, condiments) Variable 20–40% Trial specific items

How to Switch Without Waste

Start with 3–5 products per shop that are clearly low-risk (pasta, rice, tinned tomatoes). Use the own-brand once. If you notice no quality difference, switch permanently. If you prefer the branded, revert for that category.

Do not switch everything at once — you will miss products, waste money on things you don’t eat, and abandon the experiment.

Own-Brand Tiers

Most supermarkets have multiple own-brand tiers:

Tier Examples vs branded
Value/Basics Tesco Value, ASDA Smart Price 40–60% cheaper
Mid-range (standard own-brand) Tesco, Sainsbury’s, ASDA branded own-line 20–35% cheaper
Premium Tesco Finest, Sainsbury’s Taste the Difference 5–15% cheaper (sometimes same price)

The value tier varies more in quality — trial before committing. The standard own-brand tier is consistently good value for the categories listed above.

For the full savings picture, see How to Save Money on Your Food Shop UK.

Aldi and Lidl Own-Brand vs Major Supermarket Own-Brand

Aldi and Lidl do not stock branded products in most categories — their entire range is own-brand by design. This makes them the reference point for comparing own-brand value:

Product Tesco own-brand Aldi/Lidl equivalent Saving at Aldi/Lidl
Penne pasta 500g ~£0.75 ~£0.55 ~27%
Tinned tomatoes 400g ~£0.45 ~£0.35 ~22%
Whole milk 4 pints ~£1.55 ~£1.35 ~13%
Cheddar 400g block ~£3.00 ~£2.50 ~17%
Free-range eggs 12 ~£2.80 ~£2.50 ~11%

Prices vary by region and change frequently. The pattern holds: Aldi/Lidl own-brand is typically 10–25% cheaper than major supermarket own-brand, which is in turn 20–40% cheaper than branded equivalents.

What to Consider Beyond Price

Packaging and portion sizes — own-brand packs occasionally differ in size from branded equivalents. A “400g” own-brand vs a “410g” branded pack can affect the unit price comparison. Always check the price per kg/per litre on the shelf label.

Welfare and sourcing standards — for eggs, meat, and dairy, check that own-brand products meet the welfare standards you care about. Many supermarket own-brand products carry Red Tractor or equivalent assurance. Some branded items have stronger welfare credentials — this is a personal choice to balance against cost.

Children’s food — children are often less brand-aware than adults. Own-brand breakfast cereal, pasta shapes, yoghurts, and snacks are typically well accepted and significantly cheaper. Worth trialling across the full range of products your children eat regularly.

Building Your Own-Brand Swap List

The most effective approach is to systematically build a personal swap list over 4–8 weeks:

  1. Each week, swap 2–3 branded items for own-brand equivalents
  2. Note whether you notice any quality difference (and whether it matters to you)
  3. Add the swaps you’re happy with to your permanent shopping list
  4. Over 2 months, you’ll have a personalised list of 15–25 own-brand switches that save money without compromise

This approach prevents the common mistake of either switching everything at once (and abandoning it when one product disappoints) or never switching at all.

See also: How to Reduce Your Weekly Food Shop UK and Cheapest Supermarket UK 2026.

Sources

  1. Which? — Own brand vs branded food tests
  2. ONS — Food price inflation