In the constantly fluctuating game of consumer food pricing, where competition is still measured by the cent, supermarket companies are elevating in-house brands as they chase shoppers looking for ways to cut grocery bills.
While legacy food brands tend to inspire loyalty, in-house brands — often called private labels — help stores meet demand for more affordable products at a time when food and beverage inflation and high energy costs have kept prices high on the shelves.
“Consumers are really frustrated because their overall cost of living is increased [by] $6,000 a year over the last two years. … The only way for Minnesotans and U.S. and Canadian consumers to really mitigate inflation is by private label where the product is as good or better,” said Burt Flickinger, global supermarket analyst at Strategic Resource Group.
As consumers grow more price-conscious, Aldi and Trader Joe’s — whose private label brands are central to their stores — are in expansion mode, including in the Twin Cities. Aldi is expanding its reach even further with a new distribution center in Faribault, with plans to open hundreds more stores in the next few years. That means even more pressure on traditional supermarkets to expand their own brands.
A recent Star Tribune story comparing prices at a mix of Twin Cities grocery stores found the cheapest totals at Trader Joe’s and Aldi. Representatives of some of the other included chains objected to the method, noting that their own store brands, sold alongside legacy brands, give shoppers cheaper options.
Twenty percent of U.S. consumer purchases are private label, Flickinger said; in Canada and Europe, he said, it’s typically at least half the items in a shopper’s cart. A report on private brands by FMI, a food-industry trade group, found that 60% of shoppers say they’ve been buying private brands much more or somewhat more over the past 12 months.
In April, Walmart, the country’s largest grocer, added a new private label brand called Bettergoods to appeal to Gen Z and more affluent consumers. In the most recent annual report of the Private Label Manufacturers Association, released in March, more than half of Gen Z participants in a survey by the group said they “always or frequently” chose a store because of its store brands. Overall, according to the report, sales of private label brands are up 34% since 2019, including a 5% jump last year to a record $236.3 billion in sales.
Many of these goods are produced in the same factories as their name brand counterparts, Flickinger said.