From “fake bargains” to loyalty card pressure and convenience app mark-ups, shoppers are quietly losing hundreds at the checkout every year – and experts say most people are falling into exactly the same habits
I know what some people will think when they read this article. “Surely everyone already knows supermarket tricks by now?” Honestly, I thought that too.
But after years covering consumer stories and speaking to families trying to stretch every pound further, one thing has become impossible to ignore: supermarkets have become incredibly good at making us spend more without really noticing it happening.
And I don’t mean in the obvious ways people always talk about. Most of us already know not to shop hungry. We know own-brand products can save money. We know meal planning helps.
But the supermarket shop has changed massively over the past couple of years — particularly since loyalty pricing, convenience apps and “exclusive” member deals exploded.
Shopping has become far more psychological. The problem is that many of the new spending traps don’t feel expensive in the moment.
It’s the extra snack because it’s “only” £1.75. The yellow label that looks like a bargain but barely saves anything. The meal deal upgrade you didn’t really want. The rapid delivery order because everyone’s exhausted.
Individually these things seem tiny. But week after week, they quietly snowball into hundreds of pounds families never intended to spend. And the statistics suggest this is happening to far more people than we might think.
Research from Retail Economics found 70% of loyalty scheme members now shop more with retailers because of member pricing, while nearly two thirds admit they buy impulse items linked to those schemes.
So yes — some of this advice may sound obvious at first.
But if millions of shoppers are still being nudged into overspending every week, then maybe we need to stop blaming ourselves quite so much and start recognising how sophisticated modern supermarkets have become at encouraging emotional spending.
The supermarket shop has become psychological
One thing that has changed massively over the past two years is that supermarkets no longer just compete on price. They compete on behaviour.
Shoppers are now constantly nudged toward:
- app-only deals
- “exclusive” prices
- meal upgrades
- checkout extras
- personalised offers
- multi-buy discounts
- convenience spending
The problem is that these offers rarely feel expensive in the moment. A £2 bakery item. A “special” snack. An extra drink because it’s included in a deal. Individually they seem harmless. But over weeks and months they quietly snowball.
Loyalty cards are changing the way we think
This is probably the biggest change I’ve noticed personally in 2026. People no longer ask: “Do I actually need this?” Instead, many shoppers now ask: “Am I missing out if I don’t buy it?”
That’s a completely different mindset. And retailers know it works. Research from Retail Economics found that 71% of shoppers switch products because of loyalty pricing.
At the same time, 52% of shoppers admitted they compare prices at rival supermarkets less often once they are using loyalty schemes.
To be clear, loyalty cards absolutely can save money. The UK competition watchdog found shoppers can genuinely save between 17% and 25% on loyalty-priced products in some supermarkets.
But the danger comes when discounts encourage spending you never planned in the first place.
The ‘tiny spend’ problem draining bank accounts
One of the least obvious supermarket traps is what experts call “micro spending”. These are the purchases that feel too small to matter:
- premium coffees
- bakery treats
- hot food counters
- meal deal upgrades
- energy drinks
- convenience desserts
- checkout snacks
But they add up frighteningly quickly. Just £20 a week in unplanned supermarket spending becomes more than £1,000 across a year. And according to research into UK shopping behaviour, nearly a third of supermarket purchases are unplanned impulse buys.
Why people spend more when tired
Another reason shoppers are struggling is simple exhaustion. Most people are shopping:
- after work
- while stressed
- with children
- when hungry
- or while mentally overloaded
Behaviour experts say this creates “decision fatigue”, where people become more likely to make impulsive choices by the time they reach the checkout. Which explains why so many of us walk out with things we never intended to buy.
Honestly, I think many shoppers are far too hard on themselves about this. Supermarkets are designed to encourage emotional spending.
The convenience app trap
One newer issue this year is the rise of rapid supermarke t delivery apps. They are brilliant in emergencies. But using them for regular shopping can quietly inflate spending through:
- higher item pricing
- delivery fees
- service charges
- and increased temptation buying
Research this year found many households are now replacing one big weekly shop with multiple smaller convenience shops — which often increases overall spending.
And because each basket feels relatively small, people often do not realise how much they are spending in total.
Five ways shoppers can fight back immediately
Consumer experts say the biggest savings often come from changing behaviour rather than endlessly hunting vouchers. The most effective changes are usually:
- doing one planned “anchor shop” weekly
- checking unit pricing properly
- setting a strict treat/snack budget
- avoiding rapid delivery apps for routine shopping
- never shopping hungry or exhausted where possible
Research also suggests online shopping can reduce impulse spending because shoppers are more likely to stick to lists and track totals in real time. ( Consumer Council )
Because while supermarkets are becoming smarter about getting us to spend more… we can become smarter too.
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