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soy_manu on
Wth I dont know where my text went but I actually paid attention to what I buy for once and also went to Lidl for a change and I only paid 47 Eur for all of this. Much cheaper than Spain for example and you make like half the salary for the same job.
You really end up saving a lot of money without buying meat.
Mausandelephant on
The only people that really disagree with this are Germans who haven’t lived anywhere else and are upset that prices went up after COVID etc. By and large German grocery prices are pretty fucking low as long as you stick with the discounters and aren’t going wild on the name brand stuff.
ex1nax on
They aren’t. Many people seriously lack perspective and have no clue how much groceries are in other countries with lower income. A perspective you won’t really get by only going vacationing for a week every once in a while.
Ouestlabibliotheque on
My partner lives there and I in France. I find that we can go to a fancy shop over there like Tegut or Edeka and buy a lot more than I can at Carrefour for the same amount of money.
Actual-Sheepherder98 on
Me too. Most people who post about this here buy expensive stuffs, Bio and fancy labels. I always look the best option, not necessarily the cheapest one.
Garoktehone on
and what u gonna buy on Friday?
leflic on
The thing is: they were 30% cheaper 3 years ago 😁
Kitchen-Pen7559 on
It is not an unpopular opinion, but a well-known fact that groceries are quite cheap in Germany.
SnooHesitations5198 on
If it is fresh fish, it is quite expensive. The rest is not that bad
Austaube on
Rent, taxes and energie are so expensive, that the higher prices for groceries hit low income families very hard. If you have nothing left, even a small raise can knock you out.
justmisterpi on
It’s not an opinion. It’s a fact. Groceries cost more in a lot of other European countries. Even countries with a lower average income.
Germany has among the cheapest groceries in the world adjusted for purchasing power
vdcsX on
Me neither. Around the same price as my home country, but the minimum wage here is almost the double.
bettychitaqua on
It’s just relative. They are cheap compared to similar countries, but they are way more expensive than a few years ago.
I_am_not_doing_this on
because it’s not
usfwalker on
It’s the energy price shooting up that makes people feel they can get less for groceries
rpfflgt on
Germany has the cheapest groceries compared to other industrialized countries. The prices have increased by 20-30 % over the past couple of years. Imagine how cheap everything was before.
Patient-Writer7834 on
German supermarkets are quite good price wise, considering how wealthy a country is. I’d say 20% more expensive than Spain; but German salaries are twice the Spanish ones so you save more
poundofcake on
I like food. I like German food prices.
Glattsnacker on
coldest take I have ever seen
Arkliea on
I have never understood why people say they are. if you try hard enough you can make any shop expensive. i have found the prices here just fine.
Emsiiiii on
I’m from Austria and I honestly marvel every time I’m at the cash register in Germany. I usually do a rough estimate of what I’m about to pay in my head, and in Austria I usually underestimate the amount, and in Germany I always overestimate it. On Austrian subreddits it’s almost like a running joke to compare random products, even products manufactured in Austria, and find that in Germany they’re way cheaper, and this includes everything from groceries, beer, toiletries, Ikea,…
I’m a student on a tight budget so I know most of the prices for basic groceries by heart, and in Germany most products are 10-20% cheaper. Yes, in Poland, Czechia and Slovakia, most basic groceries are somewhat cheaper, but brand name products are often more expensive, and vegan and organic stuff is more expensive there as well. In Italy, you can find some cheaper stuff, especially produce, oil etc, but France, the Netherlands and London (don’t know the rest of the UK…) are somewhat between Germany and Austria.
Few_Philosopher2039 on
When I moved from the USA to here I was shocked at how cheap groceries were… Then when I returned home for a visit and I was shocked at how the prices of things increased over such a short period of time in the states.
24 commenti
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Wth I dont know where my text went but I actually paid attention to what I buy for once and also went to Lidl for a change and I only paid 47 Eur for all of this. Much cheaper than Spain for example and you make like half the salary for the same job.
You really end up saving a lot of money without buying meat.
The only people that really disagree with this are Germans who haven’t lived anywhere else and are upset that prices went up after COVID etc. By and large German grocery prices are pretty fucking low as long as you stick with the discounters and aren’t going wild on the name brand stuff.
They aren’t. Many people seriously lack perspective and have no clue how much groceries are in other countries with lower income. A perspective you won’t really get by only going vacationing for a week every once in a while.
My partner lives there and I in France. I find that we can go to a fancy shop over there like Tegut or Edeka and buy a lot more than I can at Carrefour for the same amount of money.
Me too. Most people who post about this here buy expensive stuffs, Bio and fancy labels. I always look the best option, not necessarily the cheapest one.
and what u gonna buy on Friday?
The thing is: they were 30% cheaper 3 years ago 😁
It is not an unpopular opinion, but a well-known fact that groceries are quite cheap in Germany.
If it is fresh fish, it is quite expensive. The rest is not that bad
Rent, taxes and energie are so expensive, that the higher prices for groceries hit low income families very hard. If you have nothing left, even a small raise can knock you out.
It’s not an opinion. It’s a fact. Groceries cost more in a lot of other European countries. Even countries with a lower average income.
[https://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/36336/umfrage/preisniveau-fuer-nahrungsmittel-und-alkoholfreie-getraenke-in-europa/](https://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/36336/umfrage/preisniveau-fuer-nahrungsmittel-und-alkoholfreie-getraenke-in-europa/)
Germany has among the cheapest groceries in the world adjusted for purchasing power
Me neither. Around the same price as my home country, but the minimum wage here is almost the double.
It’s just relative. They are cheap compared to similar countries, but they are way more expensive than a few years ago.
because it’s not
It’s the energy price shooting up that makes people feel they can get less for groceries
Germany has the cheapest groceries compared to other industrialized countries. The prices have increased by 20-30 % over the past couple of years. Imagine how cheap everything was before.
German supermarkets are quite good price wise, considering how wealthy a country is. I’d say 20% more expensive than Spain; but German salaries are twice the Spanish ones so you save more
I like food. I like German food prices.
coldest take I have ever seen
I have never understood why people say they are. if you try hard enough you can make any shop expensive. i have found the prices here just fine.
I’m from Austria and I honestly marvel every time I’m at the cash register in Germany. I usually do a rough estimate of what I’m about to pay in my head, and in Austria I usually underestimate the amount, and in Germany I always overestimate it. On Austrian subreddits it’s almost like a running joke to compare random products, even products manufactured in Austria, and find that in Germany they’re way cheaper, and this includes everything from groceries, beer, toiletries, Ikea,…
I’m a student on a tight budget so I know most of the prices for basic groceries by heart, and in Germany most products are 10-20% cheaper. Yes, in Poland, Czechia and Slovakia, most basic groceries are somewhat cheaper, but brand name products are often more expensive, and vegan and organic stuff is more expensive there as well. In Italy, you can find some cheaper stuff, especially produce, oil etc, but France, the Netherlands and London (don’t know the rest of the UK…) are somewhat between Germany and Austria.
When I moved from the USA to here I was shocked at how cheap groceries were… Then when I returned home for a visit and I was shocked at how the prices of things increased over such a short period of time in the states.