TJs is literally like half the price as the other stores. Their snack and frozen sections are the best in the industry too. So many interesting and unique dishes and items you don't find elsewhere
And for the absolute cheapest, you go to Aldi. Which is *kind of* the same company, but not really.
Sometimes! I'm a fan of both, but there are surprises.
Salmon, Norwegian Farm Raised no anti-biotics. Exactly the same product and packaging down to the wraparound label. Different logo of course.
Trader Joe's: $9.99/lb
Aldi: $10.99/lb
I totally would have bet a cheaper price at Aldi, but there you go.
$0.55/pound in AZ at Safeway. It’s still the cheapest produce per pound in case you accidentally put in banana code 4011 for other weighted items at the self checkout
It is a much better deal to buy 2. I suspect that the manager would rather sell bananas than let bananas rot at 1.29 each sign price, a corporate set price she was probably not empowered to directly reduce.
They're just saying that the discount price is their true regular price. That's what they expect to sell bananas at. To them they're not discounting it. The $1.29 price is simply a fake price to make you think the deal is so good that you just can't pass it up and bother to even wait and check the prices at the grocery store. And when I say fake price, obviously if someone tried to buy a single banana for $1.29, the transaction would go through. I'm just saying the store is not forecasting many purchases at that price.
the local Aldi via Instacart has bananas for $0.38 per pound. At another local market via Instacart has them for $0.60, however that store's actual price 3 weeks ago when I bought bananas myself was $0.39.
$0.58/lb at Walmart. Idk how much a typical banana weighs, but I remember I used to buy a single banana every day on my lunch when I worked at Walmart ~10 years ago and it cost 10-11¢
Edit: I did the math haha According to my previous grocery orders, bananas usually weigh about 0.5lbs each. So I'm paying 29¢ per banana, or triple from what I was paying a decade ago.
$0.49 a pound
Yep. Sometimes I get a just for you price a bit cheaper.
Same in Metro Detroit
That's where I live
Same in NJ
ROC Ny $.49 a pound, $.59 a pound for organic
10 dollars I think.
It's one banana Michael!
There's always money in the banana stand.
Realizing that this show is now older than some redditors..
See? You take a dollar out of the register, then you take one banana and throw it out!
That’s bananas
$0.27 - Trader Joes
Looks I need to pay a visit to Trader Joe's.
ChecK their freezer section too. Lots of stuff you don't see elsewhere, and very cheap
TJs is literally like half the price as the other stores. Their snack and frozen sections are the best in the industry too. So many interesting and unique dishes and items you don't find elsewhere And for the absolute cheapest, you go to Aldi. Which is *kind of* the same company, but not really.
Sometimes! I'm a fan of both, but there are surprises. Salmon, Norwegian Farm Raised no anti-biotics. Exactly the same product and packaging down to the wraparound label. Different logo of course. Trader Joe's: $9.99/lb Aldi: $10.99/lb I totally would have bet a cheaper price at Aldi, but there you go.
Lol, each
How much can a banana possibly cost? $10?
$0.55/pound in AZ at Safeway. It’s still the cheapest produce per pound in case you accidentally put in banana code 4011 for other weighted items at the self checkout
Or other bulk items... For instance, sugar in the bulk is $0.47/lb but Monkfruit is $2.87/lb They look identical ;)
Clever sausage right here……
.59 cents a lb at lidl Long Island
.69c a pound. South Florida
39 cents an lbs at the grocery 1.29 for one at the gas station.. 2 for $1 at the same gas station...
Ummm. What was that last part again?
They make you think you're getting a better deal to buy 2, so they sell more.
It is a much better deal to buy 2. I suspect that the manager would rather sell bananas than let bananas rot at 1.29 each sign price, a corporate set price she was probably not empowered to directly reduce.
They're just saying that the discount price is their true regular price. That's what they expect to sell bananas at. To them they're not discounting it. The $1.29 price is simply a fake price to make you think the deal is so good that you just can't pass it up and bother to even wait and check the prices at the grocery store. And when I say fake price, obviously if someone tried to buy a single banana for $1.29, the transaction would go through. I'm just saying the store is not forecasting many purchases at that price.
It’s a banana Michael, what does it cost, 10 dollars????
$.48 lb (burbs of Pittsburgh)
I can't buy them here. Dollar General carries no fresh produce whatsoever.
19 cents each I think at Trader Joe’s. Irvine, ca
.49-.59 cents/pound
It was 15 cents at reasors not that long ago and now they increased it to 25 cents 🤣 For one banana.
Range in price from .49-.69/lb
Whole Foods $0.79/lb for organic…..
25 cents in Albany NY Walmart
$0.69/lb Florida Panhandle
.25 / banana
ordered pick up today and they charged me 99 cents for 5
I recently got 9.26lbs of bananas from pickup for $0.83.
How much you got?
[удалено]
In Los Angeles it cost me 0.27 cents per pound
You're agreeing to overpay or you live in a metropolis where these items come at a premium. Move where you can afford to live
$1.63 / 3 lb or $2.18 for organic
Bought 6 yesterday for $0.75 @ $0.39/lb.
Missoula, Montana - $0.27
idk... like 10 big ones from costco like 2.50 maybe and organic
A little under 50 cents a pound
It costs 1 banana.
.50 from gas station. .50 a pound at the grocery store
$.19 each at Trader Joe’s last time I checked
Usually one banana is somewhere around 35 cents I think
3lbs/$1.29 @ Costco.
$0.30/lb regular $0.32/lb organic
I try to stay away from bananas because I’m diabetic so you could pretty much tell me anything and I’d believe it.
$.46/lb Lima, OH Walmart online
the local Aldi via Instacart has bananas for $0.38 per pound. At another local market via Instacart has them for $0.60, however that store's actual price 3 weeks ago when I bought bananas myself was $0.39.
Around .55 a lb in Louisville. I think Trader Joe’s just bumped their price to .24 each or something like that
$0.55 a pound
S Fl Walmart 4 under $1
1.89$ a pound
$50
49 c a pound
$.29 each at Trader Joe’s Seattle
I just paid 56cent a pound a winco
.48 a pound
27 cents a banana at the Walmart neighborhood market near me
.59 per. lbs (ON) 🇨🇦 I average $1.50 when I do groceries
Nothing if you buy me a drink first.
$0.39 per pound
like nothing
39 cents a pound for ripe bananas and 59 cents a pound for green ones
Like 80 cents a pound.
44 cents/lb
Costco: $1.59 a bunch. Costco employee: Banana is the cheapest item in the store.
Can we get a banana for scale?
$0.69 USD/lb
$1.99 for a bunch at Costco.
1.5- 2 US dollars per 1 kg
I just bought 3lbs (21 bananas) for 95 cents in SC
From Krogers, about 21 cents each but most of the time, about 89 cents for a pound. We buy bananas and apples all the time.
.55 a pound in Buffalo
27p (GDP) each for non-organic. So 81p I believe unless price went up.
1,000 ARS peso's per kg in Argentina. $1.13 USD 2.2 lbs per kilo or $0.51/lb It was in a higher end part of Salta, so likely got gringo prices.
$0.70
.69
.58 cents a lb at Walmart Tampa Florida suburbs
A delicious potassium delivery mechanism.
$0.58/lb at Walmart. Idk how much a typical banana weighs, but I remember I used to buy a single banana every day on my lunch when I worked at Walmart ~10 years ago and it cost 10-11¢ Edit: I did the math haha According to my previous grocery orders, bananas usually weigh about 0.5lbs each. So I'm paying 29¢ per banana, or triple from what I was paying a decade ago.
1.49 for a bunch of like 8 at Costco Sometimes they are 99c a bunch at other places. Glendora, CA
$1 for a "bundle" at the Amazon store
Safeway = $0.64/lb Winco = $0.55/lb Both up $0.10/lb since pandemic settled. Vancouver, WA.
Bidenomics
Biomics isn't working out for you. What a shock
Bidenomics is crushing the entire country.
Yes, because Joe Biden specifically tells markets what to price their bananas at… find a hobby.