Morrisons Supermarket, where do you rank it?
Posted by RagingMassif@reddit | AskUK | View on Reddit | 111 comments
I live in Southport, where we have all the major supermarkets. I do 99% of my shopping in Lidl or Aldi, with a very occasional visit to Asda or Tesco. I've recently had cause to visit Morrisons and quite like it. I have heard it's both "good quality and cheap", and "can be surprisingly expensive" from different people. Intuitively I count it below Sainsbury's and Tesco, but above Lidl and Aldi. I've not sat down to price match, but keen to hear from the Reddit moshpit.
Rocinante23@reddit
Below Sainsburys, above Asda
Morrisons' salt and pepper bread is doing a lot of heavy lifting
Potential-Pirate-431@reddit
Sainsbury's chicken is absolutely trash. Worst supermarket
Trick-Station8742@reddit
The main reason we switched to Ocado. I will not have water pissing out of chicken
Happy-Picture4156@reddit
Ocado is great, bUT: They delivered me a weeks worth of shopping, and all the fresh meat had the same use by date on (which was the next day) lol And that happened twice! The staff need to take more care when picking the shopping orders cos I would have stayed but they've lost a customer now
RecordingNo8140@reddit
I dunno. Have you tried Tesco chicken? That's bad!
Potential-Pirate-431@reddit
I don't think it's as bad as Sainsbury's, but that could just be me. Need to start going to a butchers
Careless_Soup_109@reddit
To be fair, a prison commissionary is probably above Asda
Midnightraven3@reddit
The salt and pepper rolls are the size of your face and £1 for 6, amazing!
GoodTato@reddit
Not a fan of Morrisons (ours is pretty shit though our asda is great) but you're damn right about the bread.
AClockworkLaurenge@reddit
Literally will make it my first stop for a food shop and if they don't have the salt and pepper bread (or the rolls as a back up), I don't even waste my time anymore and just go to the nearby Lidl instead for my food shop.
(Lidl's malted bloomer and seeded bloomer is another A-tier loaf)
pgliver@reddit
My Sainsbury's is a dump, worse than Aldi/Lidl.
Happy-Picture4156@reddit
Nope, morrsions lost me as a customer when they kept selling me spoiled meat that was still in date. I think as it so regular, it must have been a food storage problem.
mildperil_@reddit
From least fancy to most fancy, I would go Iceland, Lidl, Aldi, Asda, Morrisons, Tesco, Sainsburys, M&S, Waitrose.
I quite like a Morrisons. It’s generally where I shop because there are two in my local area. More options than Lidl, less pricy than M&S.
alurlol@reddit
Lidl and Aldi above Asda. M&S way above Waitrose.
BrewInProgress@reddit
The pretentiousness of M&S really turns me off. They are really pushing to be better than competition but so often falls short on service and facilities
Waitrose is so much more down to earth, and has a greater variety of good quality or niche ingredients for cooking from scratch.
vaskemaskine@reddit
Waitrose is pretty grim now in London. M&S still bearable in the more affluent locations.
Aetane@reddit
Waitrose has been a dumpster fire for the last few years unfortunately
Massive cuts to quality of food, poor treatment of staff, etc
vaskemaskine@reddit
Interesting. Around SW London most Waitrose locations are pretty grim now with poor selection and dire store upkeep, while all the M&S Food locations are still perfectly pleasant to shop in.
Just last week my local Waitrose had absolutely no burrata, buffalo mozzarella, Parmigiano or pecorino in stock, and when I politely inquired, the member of staff just grunted and pointed to the generic hard cheese and packets of sliced cheddar as though that should be a good enough substitute.
Their fruit and veg aisles are now frequently littered with empty crates and bog standard produce, and meat selection is absolutely woeful in all but the bigger stores.
The customer demographic has also taken a nosedive since the pandemic. Not a pleasant experience anymore.
miklovesrum@reddit
You're so wrong for putting Asda above Lidl....!
RagingMassif@reddit (OP)
Oooh Lidl then Aldi.. not Aldi then Lidl...
I feel another post is required..
vaskemaskine@reddit
Very rarely encounter one in the wild living in London. Appears to be branded towards northerners. Not my thing.
Wentzina_lifetime@reddit
I personally like Morrisons. Can find some really good ethnic stuff in there that you can't find in Tesco's and Sainsbury's.
Personally as someone who has at least one of all the supermarkets in 10 minutes drive I would rank them
Lidl, Tesco, Morrisons, Aldi, M&S, Asda, Waitrose, Sainsbury's.
DeathByFluffy@reddit
Hello fellow Southport person! I like Morrisons, but usually find myself at the new Lidl on the coastal road as it’s a bit cheaper and I like their own brand stuff.
Morrisons definitely has better steaks and fresh cakes etc in my opinion - I usually visit once a month to pick up a slab of cow as a treat. I can’t stand the big Tesco because it’s right on my least favourite thing in Southport - Kew roundabout!
RagingMassif@reddit (OP)
Hey back. It was meat that took me Morrisons on both occasions in the last couple of months. The store seems quite pleasant and the fact they have free WiFi as there is no phone signal I note as a nide touch.
DeathByFluffy@reddit
It’s a nice, airy clean store - I do enjoy when I visit. I should have also added I’m 4 miles from Morrisons and 500 yards from Lidl, hence a slight bias!
soshnomore@reddit
They also have the robot cleaning the aisles!
One_Trouble_9357@reddit
I challenge you on the steaks - Lidl do great steaks especially the 30 day aged grass fed ones.
DeathByFluffy@reddit
I’ve not had much luck so far, but I guess I’m heading over tonight! Watch this space
wemuststayfocused25@reddit
I do my main shop in Sainsbury’s but Morrisons braising steak is way better IMO. Got here especially for that.
justmoochin@reddit
Just purely out of opinion, bottom.
Mine you got to walk past toilets that stink, tad dirty, meal deals suck.
takesthebiscuit@reddit
Agree Morrisons is utter shit tier now battling asda for the race to the bottom
Fucking Private equity ripping the arse out of our once great company’s
jungleddd@reddit
It’s really sad. 10-15 years ago it was better than Waitrose for fresh produce. Now it’s dogshit. Private Equity borrowing to buy the chain, then loading the debt onto the business. When interest rates went up a couple of years ago, the cost of debt repayment rose and the business had no money left to invest in itself. Morrisons and Asda have been hollowed out. It should be illegal, what’s happened.
DefinitelyNotEmu@reddit
Yep They are struggling since £7 billion takeover by US private equity firm in late 2021 - billions in debt to fund the purchase.
To pay this down, they have engaged in significant sale-and-leaseback deals meaning Morrisons now pays rent on buildings it used to own outright, increasing its long-term fixed costs.
is76@reddit
Totally gone down hill
Used to have amazing fruit and veg , meat counter
Last time I was in gaps in fruit and veg, meat counter now all pre packaged.
Could be my local one but it was sh1te
fresh_avocado_@reddit
Salad bar is a banger
ZookeepergameSea747@reddit
Is it a proper Morrisons or a smaller one?
If its proper then its loads better than Sainsbury's et al but the smaller ones arent as good IMHO.
nintendofan2_0@reddit
My ranking:
thecheesycheeselover@reddit
They were crap when I lived in London, but in Yorkshire it’s great.
pippins2ndbreakfast@reddit
Only thing I like from Morrisons is the coburg cob from the bakery
Terrible-Group-9602@reddit
Tried Morrisons recently, first thing I saw was apples 10 p per apple more expensive than Sainsbury's. Bought a 'freshly baked' white tin loaf, literally fell apart into dust and crumbs when I tried to cut it.
BentoboxHumperdinck@reddit
Probably the best loyalty app for useful personalised offers, but too expensive compared to Aldi/Lidl to be relied on. Quality is good, but stock levels are usually terrible.
TwoValuable@reddit
Worked there for a few years, it was on the decline back in 2012 and looking at it now it's just gotten worse. I know the sentiment has shifted to Sir Ken would be turning in his grave at the state of the company.
As a customer though I still think quite highly of it. Their meal deal salad pot is still the best on offer. I do miss the hot counters having a decent amount of choice. The Meat and Fish tend to be a little more expensive but nicer. Their Nutmeg baby clothes are really nice quality and hold up in the wash. I don't care for the More card at all. My nearest is too far away to justify to be my weekly shop though.
ThaddeusGriffin_@reddit
I never really know what Morrisons USP is supposed to be. I always think of it as:
Waitrose - best quality, at a higher price
Sainsbury’s - slightly below Waitrose in terms of quality at a bit of a lower price
Tesco - just “meh” on everything, price middling, quality middling. Their USP is usually the size of their stores - you can get almost anything in their larger ones.
Asda - cheap and cheerful version of Tesco
Lidl/Aldi - budget options and quality is often a total gamble
Morrisons - just don’t know. Is it more of an Asda, a Tesco, or a Sainsbury’s? Can’t put my finger on it.
AClockworkLaurenge@reddit
Currently Morrisons USP is that it's only supermarket with counters still left. They've got the pizza counter,m and salad bar, as well as the butcher/deli, cheese, fish, bakery, etc. Mine also has hot food as part of its meal deal and larger Hot Food counter at the back.
I'd put it somewhere between Tesco and ASDA
JJY199@reddit
Marks and spencer beats all of them hands down
coconutszz@reddit
I don’t know I prefer Waitrose for big shops. M&S is good for fruit, snacks and ready meals but I would struggle to dos main shop there
RepublicWarm2383@reddit
I think Sainsbury's is the greatest disappointment compared to where they think they are. The club card scam just annoys me at Tesco. Morrisons tried to get above their station when the introduced the water stream in the veg area but they do have fresh fish counters which imo puts them above Tesco and Sainsbury's (where I live anyway).
RagingMassif@reddit (OP)
Yeah, that's very much my feeling on the USP, though there seems to be a bit of a "go there for meat" feel coming from some of these answers.
Lynex_Lineker_Smith@reddit
Mozzas was brilliant, but the quality is dropping off a cliff and the prices are rising steeply . My local Morrisons is also putting vape displays along all the checkouts which in my opinion is fucking outrageous seeing as you can’t even display sweets on a checkout.
ARobertNotABob@reddit
I buy what I want/like from each. I don't see the point in having "poorer" products in exchange for the pursuit of convenience.
Benend91@reddit
I once saw Morrisons described as a ‘supermarket that you only go to if it’s on your doorstep’ and I can’t disagree.
I recently moved house and there’s a Morrisons on my street. I pop in for yellow stickers, the salad bar and bakery stuff. Would never do a full shop there.
It is always dead too and it’s full of stuff. No idea how it’s making money.
ButImJustJim@reddit
M&S, Morrisons, Sainsburys, Tesco, Lidl, Aldi, Asda.
I do like Lidl and Aldi for certain things but I don't/won't do my full shop there
Educational_Worth906@reddit
Bottom of the pile. I prefer a few things from Lidl, but Tesco is for the ‘big shop’.
Artificial100@reddit
Around the same level as Sainsbury’s possibly below, but above Asda.
SamwiseTheOppressed@reddit
I trust the quality of the meat more than the others
ashyboi5000@reddit
I think it depends on the Morrisons, lack of investment and modernisation has outdated any store I've been in recently with obviously newer ones fairing better. But then there's also Sainsbury's I try to avoid as the shops themselves are not pleasant to be in. It's been a while since none are local but the meat and fish was always good, even if not from a counter you got the sense of quality product butchered product from the chillers.
I think Tesco is also going downhill fast, lower quality higher prices and plenty of empty shelves each time I go.
Asda, well like Morrisons, is being/has been gutted and there only ever seems to be a certain class of people shopping there.
My town/city only has Tesco and Asda as the big ones, and Aldi which has limited dietary requirement options.
Aldi and Lidl are trying and have good stuff but in my mind it's still just bits and pieces and themed weeks for food.
To try and answer your question
M&S / Waitrose
Sainsbury's
Aldi/Lidl
Tesco
Morrisons
Asda
Koda614@reddit
Nowadays I would probably put Morrisons close to bottom. It's difficult to decide if it would be slightly above or slightly below Asda. But they have both had the same downfall in recent times that have made them increasingly expensive and ever falling quality of produce. Both also seem to have slipping standards of cleanliness too with some of them looking really scruffy.
For me personally, if I want the best quality I go to Waitrose. If I want a good balance of quality and price I go to the Co-op. If I want acceptable quality but as cheap as possible I go to Aldi. And if I want as much choice of brands as possible across various a range of products then I find a large Sainsburys or Tesco. So I dom't really have a set list of order to say who is best all the way down to worst. But I would say my best all rounder is probably Co-op and worst is a battle between Asda vs Morrisons.
brushfuse@reddit
19 pence spaghetti hoops. #1 😋
CeeApostropheD@reddit
It's rock bottom for me because WHY have they got the lights dimmed so low? Just being in the place isn't pleasant, before you even get to the products and prices.
Koda614@reddit
I think that's unique to your local one. My nearest Morrisons has intense, bright, cold white LEDs beaming down on you. My second nearest has normal lighting as bright as any other supermarket.
Also dimmer lights doesn't necessarily have to be a bad thing. My local co-op supermarket for example has recently been refurbished and has much softer, lighting that puts more focus of the light on the produce than you walking up and down the aisle. It actually feels a lot more relaxed and pleasant rather than the clinical feel it used to have where I just wanted to get in and out.
JP198364839@reddit
I’ve always found in every place I’ve lived, one supermarket is always worse than the rest.
In most places it was Asda, in another Tesco. Never found a bad Morrisons really. I like their deli counter and fresh bakery options and the salad bar. If there was one near where I live now, I’d go there as my second choice behind our newly-redeveloped Sainsbury’s.
iloovehugecock@reddit
I don’t like Morrisons. It’s my local but I’d rather use the Sainsburys or Tesco Local if I can. I find their selection really bad. A lot of the shelves are empty when I go. They used to do a really nice hot food deli counter which they closed. It’s just depressing when I go there now.
UPFLou@reddit
My least favourite supermarket. My local morrisons had an unpleasant smell around the freezers for months before anyone did anything about it (think festering wound), the cafe is dirty and the prices have gone up more than any other supermarket for the items I buy. The shop itself was built in the 80's and has no sensible flow to it. Items you expect to be in a given aisle are often halfway across the shop. Stock levels are patchy. Generally a very unpleasant shopping experience. I only use it because it's closest.
RatSalad32@reddit
Down the bottom with lidl
BorderlineWire@reddit
I used to really like Morrisons but prices went up, quality dipped, ranges I liked reduced and the cafe isn’t what it used to be so now I only really go there if I want doughnuts because they do very nice doughnuts.
Mumstheword76@reddit
Number one for me even though my SO works at Sainsbury's. I like the Market Walk side of things, their fruit & veg is better than all the other supermarkets in my area (Inc Aldi) and the staff are lovely and never look harassed or overwhelmed.
ChockyF1@reddit
Ranked in order. Best to worst (subjectively): Booths, M and S, Waitrose, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons, Asda, Aldi/Lidl, Tesco.
The reality: Morrisons is my go to as it’s less than a mile from my house.
No-Tone-6853@reddit
Butcher section is good as well as the fish monger, though the one near me is a pain in the arse to get to and you need to go past about 3 other supermarkets to get to it. So probably not that high all in tbh the fresh counters do give it an edge but no that much.
redish6@reddit
Unlike the other supermarkets Morrisons own a load of food manufacturers in the uk. Meat, Fish, Produce, Bakery etc
So your traditional UK foods, meat, veg and potatoes are in theory better quality and cheaper.
For things outside this they don’t have the volume of the other food retailers so have a smaller range and likely more expensive.
JustJoshwaa@reddit
Not anymore they don’t…Bakery is swapping to pre-made, meat and fish are moving towards more pre-packed, they’ve sold off a load of their manufacturing sites last year. Companies being gutted.
UniquePotato@reddit
They own the factories, and produce for themselves as well as many other supermarkets, pub chains, catering firms and even McDonald’s. The quality is whatever is asked for them by the buyer.
There’s a move to pre-pack as cpunters aren’t as popular, younger generations just don’t like speaking to someone.
The factories haven’t been sold off (yet), they are operating under a child company Myton Foods. The rathbones bakery has closed as they couldn’t make regular sliced bread cheap enough to make be cost effective.
JustJoshwaa@reddit
They used to own many more manufacturing companies and such. I know because I had to deal with the insurance paperwork that had to list them all.
KaleidoscopeFull9951@reddit
Now owned by US private equity.
xxx654@reddit
Morrisons used to be the best of the mainstream but it’s been filleted and gutted by private equity.
It used to have in store butchers and fishmongers. Not just package and prep merchants, but skilled professionals. All gone. Cafes all gone.
Fruit and veg used to be good, very well presented. Now dirty and shabby. Same with the other aisles. Looks more like a cash and carry these days.
The stores in general are dirty with cheap lightning. The very few staff that are there look overworked and harassed.
At one point I would have put it above Sainsburys and Tesco (fur coat no knickers), now it’s only the disgrace that is Asda that stops it from getting bottom spot. Both German discounters are better nowadays.
My league table is:
M&S (far better than Waitrose these days) Waitrose Booths (massively overrated by ppl from north of England, it’s better than ok but not all that) Sainsburys Tesco Aldi Lidl Morrisons Asda.
RockAndHardPlace81@reddit
Agreed. Morrisons is horrific these days. Prices are so high because of their private equity debt, their loyalty card discounts are laughable for the same reason! We had to get a ready meal from there a year ago as there were no other options. It looked awful, tasted not great and then made my husband ill. Kick in the teeth that it was more expensive than the other big supermarkets!
VolcanicBear@reddit
Below Tesco but above ASDA.
My opinion of Tesco is probably influenced by being 5 minutes from one.
afungalmirror@reddit
Originally from Yorkshire, therefore superior to any other supermarket not from Yorkshire.
Mikey463@reddit
I go there specifically to buy their own branded extra special Colombian coffee beans. I used to spend lots on coffee and then realised it was too much. I tried all supermarkets own brands and Morrisons are my faaviorinte. I buy like 4-6 bags at a time.
Bskns@reddit
I don’t live near one but I wish I did. Their fresh cream cakes so often pop up in my cravings.
FatalCakeIncident@reddit
Good products in tatty shops. The Morrisons around my way or the only one of the big four supermarkets, for instance, from where I can buy caviar and kidney for my sushi and for my steak & kidney pies, and it's also the only shop I avoid because there's a minimum of three flickering fluorescent lights every time I go in there.
Firebrand777@reddit
Their in store soundtrack is brilliant
Tacklestiffener@reddit
We used to shop in Morrisons (live abroad now) and, IMHO, the are good for ingredients but rubbish if you want ready meals etc. Good ranges of raw materials, if you're lucky with the branch good meat and fish counters.
That said, my local Morrisons shifted all the aisles to add to rows of kids clothes and homeware. Suddenly it was like shopping in a Vietcong tunnel and felt vert claustrophobic.
cgknight1@reddit
In terms of availability by me:
Booths, Aldi, Tesco, Morrison, Sainsbury.
In reality because Booths and Aldi are next to each other that covers it.
StiffAssedBrit@reddit
We have a large Morrison's near us, and it's where I do my weekly shop. IMO it's the best supermarket for fruit and vegetables. They have a good choice and are usually well stocked. I did try Sainsburys for a while, but the fresh veg simply wasn't as good. Our Morrisons has an in house bakery and we love the salt and pepper breads and their tiger breads. I use Aldi but mainly for small top ups and certain things that I like from there. For meat, I buy it from the butchers near work as it's cheaper and way better quality than all of the supermarkets.
Scared_Cricket3265@reddit
Morrisons is a funny one for me as there are two in our town and the difference between them is night and day. So it's easy to see why people rate them, between bottom to high mid range depending on the quality of their local store.
Nosworthy@reddit
Quality-wise - near the top. But undoubtedly overpriced.
We have Asda on the doorstep and do our shopping there for convenience but the quality is abysmal these days.
Aldi is the most underrated - much better quality than the likes of Asda and cheap.
thelajestic@reddit
It's at the top for me. Nowhere else has the same range of fresh fish and meat, and since I live nowhere near a fishmonger and my local butcher is crap then it's really helpful to be able to get this stuff from Morrisons. I find they generally have a decent selection of everything else too.
I have shopped at Tesco, Aldi and Sainsbury's as my regular shops in the past - Tesco are absolutely shite for fish with a pretty poor selection of meat. Sainsbury's was expensive (this might not be such an issue for me now, I was a student at the time! But I live nowhere near a Sainsbury's now so don't bother with them), and Aldi don't have the range and I always used to have to go somewhere else to get part of the shopping, plus they've got the same meat/fish issues as Tesco.
BrewtallyCozy@reddit
My local Morrisons is going down hill. The food quality, and lack of stuff. I also have found that the prices are higher. When I do the online shop it’s just rubbish. I’ve gone back to Tesco.
Nemariwa@reddit
The physical state of my local store plus crap product range and availability means I've not even bothered to price check. It just doesn't compete.
It's the nearest pharmacy to me so if I'm there for that I might pick up some basics and I've not noticed big pricing problems. But the store is as big as any other supermarket but can't consistently stock basic salad items. The building is the same age as similar others locally but hasn't been maintained. There are buckets everywhere catching leaks and even if you didn't know it had been that way for years you can smell it.
Historical_Heron4801@reddit
Most I've been in are fabulous. The fruit and veg section is so well kept. They do a varied and interesting selection of breads, (I love Pumpernickel). It still has the type of deli counters that most of the major supermarkets have done away with.
But I don't shop there, because the one near where I live is rubbish.
Rude-Possibility4682@reddit
Not a fan, the bakery is decent, also some of the deli stuff (decent range of cheeses, meats, and Asian side dishes) are better than other supermarkets. The rest is pretty poor, and stores look dirty and lacking in stock. I've got 3 by me, and they all look the same, some worse than others.
MenthoL809@reddit
Bottom.
Scared_Cricket3265@reddit
Below Asda?
MenthoL809@reddit
Hmm now you’ve got me thinking. Probably not tbh!
CrossCityLine@reddit
The fresh meat is good, everything else is worse than at least one of the others.
According-Summer-780@reddit
I really rate it but it’s the only supermarket that’s not particularly close to my house so if I go there it’s an event and I’m hitting up them counters on the side
Even-Way9768@reddit
Overpriced for the quality and usually there's a lack of variety.
I find Tesco underrated, from recent experience the variety of options is unparalleled. The prices are higher than Aldi/Lidl but the quality is consistently good, the clubcard prices are good and aren't just reducing to the same price as elsewhere IME. The finest stuff is on par with M&S and similarly priced.
MatMcMashadar@reddit
No real opinion on Morrisons, but they've just started doing Chinese Style Salt and Pepper crisp, and Harrissa and Red Pepper tortillas that are delightful.
dewittless@reddit
Very low. Where I love the fruit and veg is often out of what I need and their selection across certain specific products is terrible (decaf teas for example).
jesuseatsbees@reddit
It’s a last resort for me. I used to do my online shop there exclusively but I don’t like shopping there in-store. The whole place just seems really depressing, full of very slow moving people and then there are just random piles of things like garden furniture in boxes alongside the tills, making the already tight aisles tighter. It’s the only place left that sells fresh oxtails though so I’m forced to go in occasionally.
buttersnapsghee@reddit
Good cat litter
Remote-Pool7787@reddit
Used to love Morrisons about 10-15 years ago. Shite and overpriced these days
AdStreet2795@reddit
About 10 years ago their bakery was amazing, now it sucks, for that alone they’re very low.
rrainingcatz@reddit
I used to live opposite a Morrisons so through partially laziness it was my main shop to use but it is expensive. I don’t live near one now but live between an Asda, Tesco and Lidl. Sainsbury’s is miles away so I don’t shop there. My personal ranking, Asda, Tesco, Lidl. But for choice and taste, Morrisons is number one. The doughnuts, cookies, pizza 😋
Urbanyeti0@reddit
The worst, I tried using it several times but their fruits and veg always seem on their last legs, their meat was poor quality and again went off far quicker than the advertised dates and were more expensive than Aldi
I do Aldi for my regular shop then do a Tesco or Sainsbury’s top up for the specific branded items or more unusual items as needed
msj247@reddit
Lidl, Aldi, Sainsbury's, Tesco, Morrisons. Morrisons is the supermarket in the closest town to me, it's really rubbish. I'll clock some litter shoved on a shelf in the shop and it'll still be there 3 weeks later. One year they cleared the free from shelves in October and left them totally empty til just before xmas when they stocked them with the free from Xmas stuff. Regularly empty shelves all week and items priced incorrectly. On the receipts it says the store manager's name and that changes so often it's hilarious.
Bastet_x@reddit
I'd rate it middle-ish, I used to shop there loads when I lived in Yorkshire but I'm used to Tesco now. I do really like that Morrisons have a butchers counter still, if I'm making a roast or a nice stew/casserole I always get my meat from Morrisons.
thomasthetanker@reddit
Number 1 for me because mine is 2 minutes walk away, if I don't support it then it might close down.
No queues at self checkouts, great music, staff seem quite happy in their jobs. I just hope they survive the mountain of debt that private equity loaded them with, if not then they'll be another Wilko.
Yankee9Niner@reddit
I rank it above Asda and Tesco, on par with Sainsbury's. It's probably a little unfair to Lidl and Aldi but above them also but I buy the majority of my essentials from those two because they lead on prices.
DanielReddit26@reddit
Sainsburys Morrisons Tesco Asda
Lidl and Aldi don't really fit in to the debate for me - I find them to be inconsistent between locations and also some things are better/cheaper from them and somethings aren't.
I try to blend Aldi and Costco in where I can alongside Sainsburys being my main weekly shop.
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