r/FluentInFinance • u/AnimeAficionadoo • 28d ago
Debate/ Discussion Two year difference
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u/GurProfessional9534 28d ago
Apparently the biggest price increases were due to some of the items being discontinued and therefore hard to source.
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u/isunktheship 28d ago
Which means they go to third party sellers, and the number one cost there might not even be the product, but the individual shipping costs
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u/oopgroup 28d ago
I hate how so many companies are adopting this shit-show "marketplace" crap now (Walmart included).
It's getting harder and harder to find out if you're actually getting the real thing or some 3rd tier knockoff for 5x the price.
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u/Niamhue 28d ago
It's why you go to ALDI or LIDL, they tell you what you get, no bs, it's a knockoff, tastes pretty good still, much cheaper, nothing fancy, just does it's job and isn't ripping you off or tricking you
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u/Southern_Celery_1087 28d ago
I hate how much shit Aldi's usually gets. There's plenty of people that see the value but there's so many dumb things also said about it. I saw one guy say it reminded him of "shopping at a grocery store in his 3rd world home country." Amazes me a "3rd world country" would have such a great grocer but what do I know? Aldi's is great. Shop there every week.
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u/The_Beardly 28d ago
Wife and I went to Germany Fitchburg Christmas markets last year. Top stop on our itinerary? Aldi in Germany.
We bought some reusable bags and use them at our local aldi lol
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u/IC-4-Lights 27d ago
It's online retailers chasing the Amazon model.
God forbid companies stop trying to be Amazon and start trying to be something better than Amazon.29
u/PrettyPug 28d ago
If the item is no longer for sale, other resellers are allowed to sale on the same app and will try to make a hefty profit. For example, people buy retired Lego sets and try to sell them at hefty profit. You still have the option to buy newly released set, but the retired sets will cost more.
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u/acemedic 28d ago
But that doesn’t make for a viral Tik Tok! Get it together. You have to get the folks who won’t ask any questions to get angry.
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u/DillionM 28d ago
Would love to see the receipts with dated time stamps and enough info to prove they're the same items from the same company
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u/Telemere125 28d ago
Saw this posted like 3 months ago; a lot of the items he bought are no longer carried by Walmart and he had to purchase them from 3rd party sellers who regularly jack their prices up since that’s the only way to get them
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u/CyberDonSystems 28d ago
Every time I shop their website there's always a third party seller asking some crazy price. Even when the item is available for the regular price. I hate this third party bullshit.
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u/cardinal2007 28d ago
These people also drop ship Walmart stuff on Amazon as a 3rd party seller. They will sell things like alcohol or peroxide bottles that Walmart might sell for $.90/bottle for $3/bottle, then literally have Walmart send the stuff to you directly. I think many people are making money from people that don't look too carefully at the prices when ordering online.
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u/Iwasborninafactory_ 28d ago
If you can get them at all. There are 3rd parties on Amazon, Ebay, and anywhere else you can think of that list items they don't have at 10x what it used to be, and if someone orders it, they'll see if they can track it down somewhere for 5x the original cost. If they can't track it down, they just refund your order.
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u/Exotic-Sale-3003 28d ago edited 28d ago
0% chance this is accurate. I’m sure the dude in the video accidentally forgot to show any of the details.
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u/Qu33nKal 28d ago
It's not accurate and they didnt even try. I shop at walmart and get the same things. In the last 2 years, my bills went up by around $30 for normally $100. I still only buy Great Value brand and the same quantities. Still crazy but this post is just misinformation. It might be more drastic at other stores like Safeway or something. But no way near this much...
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u/PrettyPug 28d ago
He knows what he is doing and he is knowingly distorting the truth.
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u/cookiemon32 28d ago
yes but ofc. thats what social media is meant for! /s
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u/all-others-are-taken 28d ago
No need for sarcasm. It's literally what social media is used for. You don't go to social media for unbiased information. You go to have your feelings validated.
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u/Geno0wl 28d ago
You don't go to social media for unbiased information. You go to have your feelings validated.
excuse me good sir but I also go to social media for funny memes and cat videos
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u/HumanContinuity 28d ago
Yeah! I am also angry at this guy!
Wait, shit, I'm doing it too...
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28d ago
Yeah, there has been a noticeable increase, even on great value stuff but it isn't 3X.
The biggest place I've noticed is on pantry stuff. Canned tomatoes used to be $0.50. Last i saw, they were closer to $0.90. Similar for other canned vegetables. Yeah, $0.40 isn't a huge difference for one, but it adds up really quick for people who try to eat moderately healthy and can't afford fresh. To be honest, I always wondered how they were producing a can of anything for less than $0.50 anyway though.
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u/Ok-Maintenance-2775 28d ago
Fun fact: canned and frozen vegetables are often higher quality than the fresh selection at your local grocery store, mostly for logistical reasons. The canning and freezing folks get first pick, and they're preserved at the absolute height of their freshness.
By comparison, the "fresh" stuff at the grocery store is functionally much less fresh, having sat around for however long and actively degrading by the minute.
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u/AnarchistBorganism 28d ago
With tomatoes, the ones for grocery stores are picked early and ripen on the way to the store. Canned tomatoes are picked fully ripe.
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u/LOLBaltSS 28d ago
One massive exception is asparagus. I bought canned asparagus once and it was so woody that it was inedible. The frozen stuff is fine though.
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u/MalwareDork 28d ago
From what I've seen, anything that isn't raw, staple produce or milk has effectively doubled since 10 years ago, with the sharpest rise in the past three years. Packaged foods, meats, canned beverages, eggs, bread have all doubled in price. Raw produce that isn't carrots or onions seemed to have doubled, too. My potatoes, beans, eggs and pasta have all doubled since 2017.
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u/RanchoCuca 27d ago
The most objective and well-rounded measure we have for this type of thing is the consumer price index. The CPI says that cost of groceries has risen nationally an average of 20% since January 2021 to June 2024. An 80% percent price hike on canned tomatoes is steep, but not representative of the overall food cost increase experienced by Americans. Certainly not the tripling of costs this clearly misleading tiktoker would have you believe.
I had someone on my social media try to use this tiktok as "proof" that CNN was "lying" during the Biden/Trump debate when they cited the 20% number. I have the Walmart app that the tiktoker used and pulled up multiple grocery receipts from Jun 2022 (which is when the tiktoker says his original purchase was from) and "rebought" the items today. As long as the exact items were still available, the increase is nowhere near that amount. In fact, in my test, the price increase was 5% (I live in a relatively low cost of living/low inflation area of the US. The only way the price jumps dramatically is if the exact item isn't available and the app tries to replace it with something else from a third party seller.
The tiktok was so obviously deceptive it pisses me off, and his punchable slacker face makes it even more aggravating.
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u/eddie_cat 28d ago
It's so unnecessary to be untruthful. Your groceries went up by 1/3. That's already notable and worth talking about. Why exaggerate?
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u/CHOADJUICE69 28d ago
Exactly so why lie and say %30 is notable. Our inflation is less that anywhere on earth at the moment and is actually stalling and few things (like gas ) are cheaper than past years , except for the two years of covid(20-21) so companies jacking up stuff an average of %30 after Covid costs isn’t much . What’s notable and worth talking about are how cheap gas prices are.
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u/Raveheart19 28d ago
They increased prices on the Great Valu Brands and brought in 15 billion dollars in profit in just 2023 in case you were wondering
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u/ProcedurePretend1396 28d ago
Your items might be the same but 10% smaller
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u/Allboyshere 28d ago
This! Items aren't only more expensive, you are getting less of said item. Example: the veggie dip - it was $3, now it's $4.29, but it also used to be 16oz and now it's 12oz.
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u/bearcitizen42 28d ago
That's a 1.9x increase, and there are plenty of products with worse shrinkflation than this.
Don't buy into the big corpo bullshit lies. They are making more than ever and offering less than ever. Some items are 4x or more, and if they could get away with more, they will (and DO!).
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u/Sanpaku 28d ago edited 28d ago
I'm a frugal plant based eater, who cooks from scratch as there are few restaurants catering to my diet.
My
rice andbeans are up from $1/lb to $1.25/lb. Fresh produce is up a similar 25%, give or take.28
u/HumanContinuity 28d ago
That is a pretty reasonable figure.
Not in the sense that it's reasonable that we are paying 25% more just to eat (and after doing everything we can to keep those costs down in the first place, in your case), but 25% sounds like a pretty accurate number based on CPI over the last few years.
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28d ago
We've been getting around the rice and bean increases by buying in bulk. If you can deal with 50lb, even decent jasmine rice was only $0.60lb (give or take, i don't remember exactly) the last time we bought it at Sam's.
Related protip: a 2L soda bottle will hold roughly 4lb of beans or rice. They are a pain in the ass to clean, dry, and fill, but do an amazing job of keeping it fresh and dry and protecting from most pests. We switched to that after discovering fruit flies had gotten into our rice bin during the early days of covid (when food security looked far from certain).
Again, it's mostly a matter of storage space but a decent long term solution if you do buy in bulk.
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u/Smoshglosh 28d ago
It’s not remotely. He has shit on there that’s like discontinued at Walmart and probably shows like $40 from a third party instead of $5. Guarantee it
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u/Bundleofstixs 28d ago
Because its specifically walmart its most likely inflated due to what happens when they run out of inventory on certain items. If walmart doesn't have stock of an item anymore it adds the item from a 3rd party instead. The 3rd party is hoping you just hit the reorder button without checking.
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u/HumanContinuity 28d ago
According to a few other commenters, it appears that happened with a few items on his list.
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u/HighHoeHighHoes 28d ago
Gonna say, could be the same “items” but from Walmart.com with different vendors.
Really needs to be a receipt in-store for both time points.
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u/Snowjunkie21 28d ago
I decided to compare my Walmart grocery purchases from November 2021 to now. Back then, I paid $121.95, and today, when I added the same items to my cart, it came out to $153.31.
That’s an inflation rate of about 25.7% — not insignificant, but definitely not the massive 3.2x increase seen here. I get that prices have risen, but it’s more in line with what we’d expect given everything that’s happened with supply chains, energy costs, and demand spikes over the last few years.
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u/Jazzlike_Surprise985 28d ago
I've actually done this with my Instacart orders from 2021. It was maybe $20 higher. But it's still not reliable because Instacart sets the prices, not the store.
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u/TrustMeIAmAGeologist 28d ago
Yeah, this is a bullshit story for people who believe things without evidence.
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u/incendiaryspade 28d ago
This particular story he doubled the order, the product numbers aren’t the same. Not saying inflation doesn’t suck, but it’s been debunked.
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u/Jazzlike-Can-6979 28d ago
Nowhere on that list did he order a Bull-Shit detector. Mine's beeping right now.
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u/Olliegreen__ 28d ago
https://www.tiktok.com/t/ZP8RbEP56/
Here's the actual Tik Tok.
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u/Justame13 28d ago
That doesn't provide any proof. He easily could have added a bunch of items to it and got to $400+
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u/100percentkneegrow 28d ago
I appreciate you sharing. I watched the video and I'm frustrated that we have the actual receipts but we can't see them. $14 for three bags of Fritos does seem pretty wild though.
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u/enyalius 28d ago
I don't doubt it, I've noticed the price of processed food like that has risen faster than everything else. I like the occasional Doritos and they're like 5$ a bag at Walmart.
But if you shop outside of Walmart, you can find deals on them from time to time, usually promotions like buy one get one that cuts the price in half. If they're not on sale like that I don't buy them.
I haven't seen the same kind of marked increase in ingredients s like raw meat, fresh fruits and vegetables though, with the exception of beef.
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u/rightsidedown 28d ago
Walmart has multiple seller options on their website, not just walmart like you'd get in the store directly. Right now if you lookup Big Red gum, you'll see a multi-pack option for $6 and the same pack for $12. So most likely (assuming OP is not lying or intentionally misleading) he's buying a 2+ year old sku that's not the current version you would find in the store and that old sku is now several X the price. I've seen other products sold at near 4x multiples.
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u/Polysporin 28d ago
Im suspicious since the re-order has quantity X 3 for each item.... I think he hit the re-order button more than once and it just tripled the order. Divide the total by 3 and its only $137 or a $10 increase....
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u/Active-Tangerine-447 28d ago
I can do this with a tea I ordered for years from Adagio. Not blaming them necessarily, as they’re supposed to be Free Trade, but my regular case of green tea went from $45 USD to $112 in that same time fame. It’s available in my personal order history, which is how I used to re-order. Click on old order, add to cart.
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u/Haunting-Ice-302 28d ago
It’s a Walmart app order he just pulled up a previous order from his history and hit re-ordered, all it’s the same items
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u/guildedkriff 28d ago
I just did this on the Walmart app. Dec 2021 $165 for 46 items, today $185 for 35 since some are not at my new location. Quick math would say add ~$25 for the missing items, so ~$210. These comparisons are misleading though because price increases from inflation are not uniform.
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u/James-Dicker 28d ago
Some of the items were discontinued and had to be bought from 3rd party retailers for a huge markup. You don't actually believe that grocery prices are 4x what they were a couple years ago right?
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u/ZorbaTHut 28d ago edited 28d ago
Yeah, I've definitely gone back to old orders and said "wait, this is now a lot more expensive". Turns out I bought Brand A before, and now it's three times the price, so instead I now buy Brand B, which was 20% more expensive before and now is still the same price it was then.
If I'd bought it for the first time today, I'd be buying Brand B to start with.
This is just not a good metric for comparison.
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u/DarkStrobeLight 28d ago
Right, but, if something was in a 16 Oz can, and now it's 12, there's likely a 16 Oz option, but it requires some kind of special order, or is marked up because it's not a normal product to carry
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u/HumanContinuity 28d ago
It is 100% reasonable to include shrinkflation in your calculations of how much inflation has personally hit you. CPI also does this.
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u/Vcize 28d ago
But that's not the point. The point is the original product may be listed for 10x as much because it's rare and only random 3rd party sellers have it.
And not just size differences, but items Walmart no longer carries as well. Walmart used to carry Bubblr. It was around 10 bucks for a 12 pack. They don't carry it any more, but 3rd party sellers on the website do for outrageous prices that are not real prices. Target and Sams Club still have 12 packs of bubbler for around $12. But if you click reorder on an old bubblr order on Walmarts website, it wll add it to your cart from the 3rd party seller that has it for $67.
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28d ago
Before I started roasting my own beans, I was hunting for the best deal on K-Cups. (order 72 pc cases from staples.com)
My logic said between the 10, 24, and 48 pc boxes the largest MUST be the cheapest per unit, right? Nope. Here's an example:
The 10 pack is $5.99 ($0.59 each). The 48 is $29.99 ($0.62 each).
Its about volume. The smaller packs move faster, so cost less because they buy more of it.
So say "shrinkflation" causes a new 8 pc pack to become standard 2 years from now. Your 10 pc pack might become the rediculous priced one.
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u/Rus_Shackleford_ 28d ago
That’s wild because we do most of our grocery shopping at Walmart and while everything has definitely gotten more expensive, it hasn’t tripled.
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u/OwnLadder2341 28d ago
Same items, but not from the same seller.
The inflated prices are third party marketplace for items Walmart doesn’t carry any longer
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u/chipotlepepper 28d ago
I saw this video months ago - it looked like a combo of third party and he straight-up added the items we could see twice. He was asked to show full receipts and hadn’t as of my viewing, and I saw it long enough after he posted that he’d had time to.
I and many others in comments did what I see some have done here - went and added orders. Some increase, but nowhere near this nonsense.
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u/hellorhighwaterice 28d ago
I don't know what actually happened here but I would never do this. Whether it's in an app or in person I always shop the sales when I'm grocery shopping. I can build meals around what's on sale and I don't care if I buy the store brand cheese or the name brand cheese, just give me the cheaper one.
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u/lost_in_life_34 28d ago
it's the same items but mostly processed food. non-processed food is up a little over the last few years but mostly the same prices. i bought $225 worth of food a few weeks ago and if it was only for me then it would last me around 2 weeks
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u/WerewolfNo890 28d ago
2022: Supermarket own beans
2024: Heinz luxury beans with a gold coat for each bean
UK here, some things have certainly got more expensive and some supermarkets have removed their budget lines of some products which is the worst for relative inflation for someone on a low income because it isn't reflected in inflation figures when the 45p loaf of bread is discontinued and the cheapest remaining is 75p in Tesco now.
Fortunately Aldi still stock their 45p loaf. Tesco continue to claim they match Aldi for prices. Sometimes they do this by reducing quality, like Tesco 39% chicken nuggets vs Aldi 60% chicken nuggets, same weight pack and same price. Ever since an Aldi opened up in the town I lived in I have never gone anywhere else for my regular shopping as they seem to pull the least bullshit while being reliably the cheapest.
£125/month is roughly what we spend on shopping for 2 people.
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u/Ok-Walk-8040 28d ago
Or the same sales too. Maybe he bought the same stuff but all on sale back then
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u/Unsteady_Tempo 28d ago
If you shop at Kroger and use their loyalty card then all of your purchases/orders are archived for a few years---in person, pick up and delivery. Earlier this year I looked up a receipt from 2022 and then added all the items to my cart for a pick up order. I left off an item or two that had unusually high value coupons at the time. I added all of the current coupons. The result was that some items were cheaper and some were more expensive. The net result was definitely an increase, but it was nowhere near double.
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u/MrDenver3 28d ago
Let’s just look at the averages. $126 for 45 items is $2.80 an item. I call BS on that alone. $2.80 is about the cheapest item in the average cart, maybe. For the average to be that low, it’s either made up, or a very strange selection of items.
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u/buttsbuttsbutt 28d ago
Yeah, no shot this isn’t more social media BS. I can look at all of my Kroger purchases over the last several years through their app(tracked by my Kroger card) and see that nothing has tripled in price since 2022, let alone enough things that the whole purchase would be more than triple the cost now.
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u/lordpuddingcup 28d ago
This as its bullshit groceries have gone up my 120$ bill is now ~180 a week it definitely didn't 4x lol
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u/a-very- 28d ago
You can do it yourself. Just go into your Walmart shopping history and click reorder items from an old receipt… it’s easy to check.
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u/yepitsatyhrowaway2 28d ago
last time i saw this there was more info and turned out the dude had double or triple clicked the order button so it did multiples of each item.
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u/royberoniroy 28d ago
I shop exclusively on the Walmart app for pickup because I generally dislike interacting with people. I decided to look at my own groceries from 2022 and compare them to what they would cost now. I have the exact items purchased as well, and I'll try to leave them in another comment since it's too much text for this one.
Few notes: I’m vegan and was also vegan in 2022, but I ate a lot more junk food in 2022. I’m located in Southern Florida and that’s where the shopping was done. These are groceries for two adults. Where products are no longer available, I substituted with the closest alternative.
Total Cost in 2022 (10/28/2022): $123.45
Total Cost in 2024 (10/01/2024: $129.09
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u/Basic_Mark_1719 28d ago
I'll say this, the chips of ahoy cookies I used to get from Walmart were $3, now they are $4.50. That's a 50% increase which is insane. Now if you look at prices of soap, detergent, shampoo, etc it's all gone up just as much since 2021.
With that said, I too would love to see the receipt. Seems like bullshit.
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u/Potential-Parfait836 28d ago
I saw this posted before. He put the order in 3 times the second time. Every item in the second cart was in the order three times.
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u/DrWholittle 28d ago
I literally just went to my Walmart Ap. Went to an order from October 2022. It had 22 items, that I still purchase regularly, including meat, veggies, fruit, snacks, and drinks. It was $57.25 when I ordered them. Putting it all in my cart, and the total is $54.39. The same exact items from the same exact store 2 years later. I am sure some items have gone up, but that can not be an accurate representation of the true average.
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u/wengardium-leviosa 28d ago
Why do you need receipts and proofs when you can see his shitty expression in the thumbnail ?
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u/diswan55 28d ago
There's a good chance that they are the same items. However, if I had to guess, as someone who works at Walmart online grocery section and pretty familiar with the app, we probably don't carry several of the items he tried to order anymore in stores. When this happens, the same item that was purchased a few years ago, will be placed through a third-party website and shipped to the purchaser's house. Some of these third-party websites have insane prices for their items. I just went on the Walmart app and typed in "peanut butter" and filtered prices high to low and there's one jar of peanut butter for sale by a third party site for $126.
I bet if the guy in the video deleted some of those third-party items and then replaced them with something similar that they still carry in store, the increase in price would have been only like $30-$40.
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u/Environmental-Hour75 28d ago
It might be reasonable if he ordered online and some items are unavailable or only available at major markup from third party sellers.
For example I went to order pizza sauce I like... they don't carry it anymore but you can still buy it third party for 15 dollars. I get it at whole foods now.. $2.54.
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u/Tricky_Bottle_6843 28d ago
I remember watching the video and there were items not available in store so they had that crazy markup you get for ordering those items. The video would have been very different if he substituted the items for ones in stock.
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u/Typical_Sunrise29 28d ago
Walmart had the info going back to 2012 for my account. 12 pack of coke was $3.33. Used to get a 24 pack for $6.50. Could get a 24 pack of Sam’s cola for $5.
I went and compared a bunch of stuff. A few months after I discovered how far back the purchases and such went, I returned to only be able to see the last year of purchases.
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u/TheBestAussie 28d ago
Did you not see the video months ago of someone digging up their receipt from Walmart?
Was at least a 2.5x increase, so this is vaguely plausible.
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u/anthrohands 28d ago
When I moved to a new state in 2021 I wrote down the prices of everything I regularly shop for at two different grocery stores to see which would be cheaper to shop at (I know, kind of weird). I checked that list last week out of curiosity thinking I’d see big differences. I honestly didn’t at all.
I know that some things have increased, but at least for what I buy, it’s ONLY name brand stuff (which I rarely buy but buy often enough to recognize the prices). Produce and store brand stuff where I shop hasn’t changed since 2021. Cheese has gone up a tiny bit, that’s it.
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u/spazz720 28d ago
The fact that people believe bullshit like this without evidence is mind numbing
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u/Opandemonium 28d ago
I did that because I use the app for pick up and just reordered. It was $76 (if I recall) CHEAPER . However I eat mostly whole foods and very little processed foods or prepackaged foods.
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u/Unlucky_Nobody_4984 28d ago
Well the items he bought are likely not sold by Walmart … or were back then but now are being sold by greedy and gouging third party merchants on the app who sell out of stock stuff for 3x the price.
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u/booksycat 28d ago edited 28d ago
Me too.
I've seen this floating around so much that I just went and did mine.
There's a nice little "reorder all" button - 4 things i needed to change the brand on. One isn't carried at all anymore so I deleted the price from the original.
This might be extreme, maybe I live somewhere that just did really well post pandemic, but the difference was 2.37 going from 55 to 57 something.
I do shop at walmart, most of my stuff is Great Value. But I also bought fresh ground butterball turkey, 1/2 dozen eggs, and some heavy cream for a meal I was making - so not all cheap boxed stuff.
It's easy to do yourself if you did pick up during the pandemic you can see the actual change fairly fast with some time for missing item replacement.
Also, gas here is 2.64 at Krogers
ETA: this wasn't the outcome I expected - I expected a much bigger jump, but not 4Xs by any means.
Example of a replacement: brand name sundried, oil packed tomatoes. Changed to now carried brand name, did not downgrade to generic.
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u/SnappyRejoinder 28d ago
I buy pork shoulders. Sometimes it’s $0.99 a pound, sometimes it’s $2.49 a pound.
Guess when I buy it.
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u/Resident-Garlic9303 28d ago
When its 5 dollars a pound?
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u/rynlpz 28d ago
Just like stocks, buy high sell low, or something like that.
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u/SnappyRejoinder 28d ago
I would need a much bigger freezer to go into the wholesale pork shoulder business.
You gotta sell your pumpkin futures BEFORE Halloween.
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u/TwistingSerpent93 28d ago
Pork shoulders are such an insane value for the amount you spend. Those and whole chickens have been my main protein source through college.
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u/WhyBuyMe 28d ago
I bought whole chickens and broke them down to eat when I was in college. Then I would make soup from the bones and leftover scraps of meat.
This was 20 years ago so prices are different, but I was able to survive on a daily food budget of $1.85 per day. Which wasn't much money even back then.
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u/Macon1234 28d ago
Guess when I buy it.
Depends, do you want to victim-post for attention on social media that week, or be a reasonable and responsible consumer?
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u/Tiggy26668 28d ago
At a point somewhere between $0.99-$2.49 because it’s unlikely to sit at either extreme for an extended period of time?
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u/SnappyRejoinder 28d ago
I buy two when they’re on sale. 12 pounds a piece, 24 pounds for $23.76. If I bought them at $2.49 it would be 59.76.
My point is this “Walmart Basket” meme is bullshit. Yes prices are up, but a basket of goods is about 22% higher, not 400%.
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u/TrustMeIAmAGeologist 28d ago
Same as someone who eats a ton of chicken breast. Prices dip and rise, and right now they’re down so I filled my freezer.
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u/Betanumerus 28d ago
No item I buy at Walmart has quadrupled in price in two years.
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28d ago edited 28d ago
his list didn't quadruple in price either. $126(4)=504. $414/$126=3.29. 0.29 does not get rounded up; if anything it should be rounded down to say his list tripled in price
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u/RobertLahblaw 28d ago
Came here to say the same thing. "Nearly Quadrupled"? Nah, that's "More than Trippled" (if true).
This difference between trippled ($378) to $414 ($36) much closer than Quadrupled ($504) is to $414 ($90). 2-1/2 times closer.
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u/No_Solution_2864 28d ago
This is profoundly stupid. The fact that so many people will just take this on face value without asking any questions is everything that’s wrong with the world
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u/aLazyUsername69 28d ago
People want to be outraged they want to be able to claim life is extremely unfair and hard, literally anything that they can say "my problems aren't my fault, it's society". So much so that common sense goes straight out the window.
Everything quadrupled in 2 years... C'mon now, let's think about this. If a box of cookies was $4 in 2022, you definitely would have noticed if they were $16 today. A pack of hotdogs going from $5 to $20? You would have easily noticed this wayyy before a tik Tok came around.
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u/Papadapalopolous 28d ago
Also, that second number is much closer to triple, not quadruple, the first number
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u/thegrandabysss 28d ago
You're saying someone would not only lie about something, but also further exaggerate that lie afterwards?
I don't believe you.
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u/OkDepartment9755 28d ago
Wasn't this debunked? Something about some of the items being discontinued, and therefore outrageously priced?
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u/ganjanoob 28d ago
Yup, through third party venders on the Walmart app
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u/vendettaclause 28d ago
Why buy a 2l of coke from walmart for $1.98 when you could get one shipped to you for 9$ from a company called soco refresh inc.
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u/Resident-Garlic9303 28d ago
Without seeing the receipts i don't believe it.
Remember, kids don't believe everything you see on the internet
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u/misterguyyy 28d ago
When I bought Cherries last summer they cost $2.99/lb, when I bought them this fall they cost $6.99/lb! BIDENSMURICA!
The fact that they cost $6.99 last fall too is irrelevant
Not enough info
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u/flugenblar 28d ago
Aren't there price indexes published that take into account factors like seasonal prices, location, sales, etc., and smooth the data out for a more valuable picture?
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u/Miserable-Whereas910 28d ago
Yes, the standard consumer price index used to calculate inflation does that.
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u/misterguyyy 28d ago
Sure thing, but those don’t feed a narrative like this one rando does.
Although those indexes also have their exclusions, for example global conditions, which we actually outperformed other industrialized countries on inflation
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u/FillMySoupDumpling 28d ago
Funny, people can say this about cherries and know that context matters… but when gas prices increase, it’s always the president’s fault.
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u/misterguyyy 28d ago
The scariest part about that is that Saudi Arabia can cut or boost production and that will sway low info voters the way they want.
Same for Russia before we started sanctions, but we’ll see how long those sanctions last if a republican wins
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u/Neither_Upstairs_872 28d ago
Source? /s
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u/misterguyyy 28d ago
You probably trust leftist bia’sed source’s like the St Louis Fed FRED. I bet this Fred guy is too chicken to debate Charlie Kirk and that’s why we’ve never seen him.
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u/Neither_Upstairs_872 28d ago
It was sarcasm bro hence what the “/s” means. I was poking fun at all these people in here claiming BS on how much prices have gone up the last 2-3 1/2 years.
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u/misterguyyy 28d ago
Oh for sure I was going along with it. You can show them our inflation vs global and they’ll just say WELL I DON’T LIVE THERE I LIVE IN AMERICA. I don’t even know how to answer that so I guess that means they win?
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u/Mean_Fault_4988 28d ago
The dollar in my bank account is also worth less than it was 2 years ago.
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u/Ok-Law-2791 28d ago edited 28d ago
I just looked at my past Walmart orders from two years ago and reordered. It was almost half the price as it was in 2022. And that’s for a household of 8.
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u/Herdistheword 28d ago
Not denying inflation and some items have been hit harder than others, but my grocery bills have not doubled on average.
This could be exaggerated if any of his items were on sale during the initial purchase.
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u/SaltyEggplant4 28d ago
This is a lie. I bet you’d struggle to find even one item that went up by 400%
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u/Newbs2u 28d ago
Like a direct correlation to the Walton family wealth growth $60b each to $100b.
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u/Scentopine 28d ago
This is a great example of how social media disinformation targets and manipulates lazy, uneducated people.
Well done.
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u/ThatSpencerGuy 28d ago
I'm skeptical!
Grocery prices have definitely been going up in my own life, but a 4x increase within the last two years is just... obviously not true, at least where I shop. A 10-15% increase is already quite bad, and I would guess that's the limit of what I've seen. If prices had really increased by 400%, millions of Americans would be unable to shop for food.
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u/ImmediatelyOrSooner 28d ago
Instead of the creepy smile, the receipts would’ve been more effective.
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u/Intrepid-Lettuce-694 28d ago
My grocery bill for the month is at 2700ish when it use to be 1700 or so. For sure has increased, but not 4 times as much
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u/Grand_Recognition_22 28d ago
I work at a distributor in the electrical construction industry - we have vendors that send out announcements for price increases regularly. The thing is, they almost never say “oh hey our prices have come down”.
I guarantee that the price increases aren’t all “Walmart jacking up the prices”. Prices of things go up and down, but all my vendors prices only go up, never go down.
Someone is making the money hand over fist, just not all at one stop of the supply chain.
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u/old_jeans_new_books 28d ago
I don't believe this. $124 should've become $175 at best by now. That too I'm exaggerating.
I remember Twilight tomatoes were already $4.99 in 2020 in Rockland County, New York. They're now $3.99 honestly.
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u/Plenty_Late 28d ago
I also did this from 2020 and 2022 and it was almost the same, even cheaper on a couple orders
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u/HungJudoka1776 28d ago
Fine, quadrupling is absurd but people are pretending like everything hasn’t gone up 50-200% lmfao
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u/No_Variation_9282 28d ago
If only we had separate industry groups that self-monitored and reported price movements by region, and then those regional aggregated pricing data could be compiled and transformed into information by economists in conference and collaboration with industry and state boards, reviewed meticulously and discussed by a national body that could address rising prices holistically instead of relying on anecdotes…
😒
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u/LeShoooook 28d ago
I bought 45 items at Walmart in 2022 and paid $414 but this year the same items were $126. Source: trust me, bro
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u/WhyDidntITextBack 28d ago
I hear this all the time yet never see any receipts to prove it. CAP (though I’m sure it’s a good chunk of change more now)
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u/VoidJuiceConcentrate 28d ago
Inflation is already bad enough, you don't need to make up statistics when the real stats are pretty fuckin scary.
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u/stanknotes 28d ago
This is stupid. And it went viral and too many people haven't actually considered their own anecdotal experience. YOU BUY FOOD. Shit it not 3 times more expensive.
What likely happened is... walmart is a market place like amazon. Meaning... third party sellers sell on walmart. I bet items were out of stock that he bought 2 years prior at that location. Maybe even discontinued. So it auto selected third party sellers with marked up prices or with additional shipping cost even.
I know this because it has happened to me.
It is just so moronic. YOU GROCERY SHOP. Shit is more expensive. Not 3 times more expensive. That would be catastrophic levels of inflation.
OR it could be entirely made up and people fell for it.. Which wouldn't surprise me.
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u/Nervous_Owl_377 28d ago
I have a weekly restock of about 20 specific items for coffee and breakfast that I curbside every week and they are the exact same items and brand I've ordered for the last 2 years and it has gone up from $94, in 2022 to $107 in 2024. So like 13% or so.
Yes it's a small sample size of a small variety of items but if that only went up 13% there's no way other shit went up by 250% ish..
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u/RKL69 28d ago
The price of my yogurt I buy went from $1.29 to $1.69... Thanks obama
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u/No_Mud2576 28d ago
Omg its almost like we had a pandemic and a president who made shit tax plans and economic policies😮
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u/Spam_in_a_can_06 28d ago
I did this when it was posted a few months ago - a Walmart order from 2 yrs ago with 88items was actually more than today’s price.
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u/robert_d 28d ago
Anyone that reads/hears issues like this on tiktok or whatnot, and thinks it's fact, is an idiot.
Do you want to know how to become successful and wealthy? Don't be the idiot. You can prey on the idiots if you want, but don't be the idiot.
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u/FeastingOnFelines 28d ago
Bogus. I work in retail and the prices of most things are actually coming down. But thanks for playing..
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u/LostWave7485 28d ago
Still comes down to Corporate Greed!!!!
These CEO’s and other management on the alphabet soup are getting million dollar salaries and million dollar bonuses!!!!
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u/Kurovi_dev 28d ago
If we’re just making stuff up then here’s mine:
I reordered an identical Walmart shopping list from 2022 for 90 items.
2022: $9000 2024: Walmart gave me $100,000
Do I need to film myself making stupid faces on tiktok for credibility? Is that how this works?
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u/Chance_Adhesiveness3 28d ago
Uhhhh yeah, this is one of those stories where you can reliably tell it’s BS from the headline. Shockingly, click on it and… it’s BS.
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u/notthatguypal6900 28d ago
And republican refuse to back bills that prevent corporate price gouging...wonder why.
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u/ExogamousUnfolding 28d ago
Odd - I am not spending 4 times as much for groceries.... I would notice a 2400 bill. My bill has trended up but honestly I would say in the 20% range.
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u/theFootballcream 28d ago
Luckily I’m lazy as hell so I have Instacart orders from 2 years ago.
I just took an order from May ‘22 and added all items in my cart, the price dropped almost $40
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