
Your weekly grocery run takes a heavier toll on your wallet than it did just a few years ago. Driven by supply chain disruptions, fluctuating fuel costs, and labor shortages, average U.S. grocery prices have surged nearly 30% since 2020.
While inflation has cooled slightly in 2026, many major supermarket chains continue to pass increased operational costs down to shoppers.
Recent data from Consumer Reports highlights a stark reality: depending on where you shop, you could be paying up to 40% more for the exact same household staples.
If you are trying to stretch your monthly budget, knowing which stores apply the steepest markups is your best defense against overpriced produce and premium-priced pantry essentials.












2 Responses
Gelson’s of course, they are very expensive. They think people find money in the street or grows on trees.
There are no supply chain disruptions.
Weekly deals or whatever the deal is, is not a solution for the high grocery prices consumers have been enduring. Afterall, weekly deals offer by the major grocery stores, have existed as sales-promotions pitch for years and they only put temporary smiles on customers faces. The one solution that I think, may be helpful to consumers is for the administration to step up and find not a piece -meal solution to the high grocery prices problem, but a solution that would have a real impact (relief) to the consumer.