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Ripoff on Aisle 3

Grocery shopping has turned into an art form. Inflation has attacked grocery stores in unthinkable ways and shoppers now have to approach the errand like it's a battle zone, curating a well-thought-out plan based on sales and coupons to get out alive. There are some money-saving tips to keep in mind, and there are also purchases that should be avoided or made elsewhere, like the ones we've listed below. 

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1. Pre-Cut Fruits & Vegetables

When it comes to purchasing produce, buy them whole, not pre-cut. You'll pay more for prepared versions, likely because they require additional labor to cut and package.

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2. Bottled Water

Single-use plastic bottles of water cost more to purchase consistently than you'd spend on a filter for your sink or refrigerator to get your purified water that way. 

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3. Pre-Made Salads

Packaged salads, whether in plastic bowls or salad kits, are usually pricy compared to the DIY variety. You'd be better off buying lettuce and other in-season or on-sale produce to round out your own salad.

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4. Microwavable Pancakes

Pancakes are easy enough to throw together, and you can even make a big batch and freeze them. With that in mind, microwavable pancakes are better left behind the glass doors of the grocery store's frozen food section.

Kroger

5. Baby Carrots

Baby carrots get put in your cart to get put in your fridge to their inevitable slime-coated death. They don't maintain their integrity for very long and they also seem to be inconsistent with quality. Despite being generally affordable, whole carrots are even cheaper, they're more versatile, and they last longer. Opt for those instead.

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6. Single-Serve Yogurt Cups

You might pay $1 a piece for single-serve yogurts, or you can get a 32-ounce container for around $3 and portion it out yourself. There is a clearly better choice to be made here, and it looks something like not wasting your money on little cups of yogurt.

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7. Out of Season Produce

Have you ever had a hankering for corn on the cob in December or craved a persimmon in June? Those are expensive cravings to satisfy. You might pay triple for corn on the cob when it's out-of-season than you would when it's in season. Force your tastebuds to want the appropriate seasonal produce.

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8. Baking Mixes

From pancake mix to cake mix, those little Betty Crocker boxes are often just comprised of ingredients you probably already have in the pantry (and that flour and sugar will stretch further than just one batch of cupcakes). Leave the mix alone and look up a recipe instead.

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9. Bakery Items

Speaking of baking, if you grab baked goods from your grocery store, chances are you're paying a pretty penny for something you could make cheaper at home (like muffins). Not to mention, since these items are freshly baked instead of preserved, they tend to grow mold quickly once you get them home.

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10. Shredded Cheese ...

Shredded cheese can be pricey, and buying a block of cheese is often more cost-effective and it usually tastes andmelts better too.

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11. ... Or Pre-Cut Cheese

Those handy "cracker cuts" cheese slices are handy indeed, but you're going to spend more for them than you will to buy a block that you slice yourself.

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12. Spices & Seasonings

Some stores will charge more for spices and seasonings than others, so shop smart and price them out first. Store brands also tend to be cheaper than brand names like McCormick.

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13. Snack-Sized Packs

Individually wrapped snack packs cost more than their whole-box counterparts. Riddle us that. We'd rather buy the box and portion it into snack-sized baggies ourselves.

14. Microwave Popcorn

Buying popcorn kernels is much cheaper than microwave popcorn these days. There's nothing like the real thing when it comes to flavor either, and microwave popcorn just doesn't cut it.

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15. Coffee Creamer

There are an assortment of coffee creamers at the grocery store and a whiplash-inducing range of prices to go along with them. If your tastebuds are partial to Starbucks or International Delight, you're undoubtedly spending more money than the folks rocking with the store brands or shopping sales.

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16. Name-Brand Cereal

Price fatigue is high-risk in the cereal aisle. Chances are if it's not on sale or off-brand, it's too expensive to bother with.

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17. Name-Brand Chips

Like cereal, inflation has tainted chips like Doritos and Ruffles. You'll pay top-dollar for those brand-name chips if they aren't on sale, while copycat store brands are comparable in taste and cheaper to boot.

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18. Packaged Dips

Another item that goes to your refridgerator to die. Those packaged dips look and sound so good, so you grab a box of crackers to go with them. Only, it seems the cracker-to-dip ratio is always off and the dip that remains will hang out in your refrigerator waiting for a new box of crackers to become best friends with. The crackers never come, and the dip goes bad before you can enjoy it all. Womp womp.

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19. Energy Drinks

Single-serve cans of energy drinks are pricey at the grocery store. If you have to have your carbonated caffeine fix, try buying in bulk at Costco or Sam's Club for better per-can deals.

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20. Party Supplies

Don't stock up on decorative paper plates, balloons, and party horns at the grocery store. You'll find much better prices on items like those at the dollar store.

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21. Frozen Dinners

If you can make it cheaper without too much hassle, just devote one day a month to preparing meals for your freezer. Enlist someone else in your household or a friend for help to make the task even more manageable. 

22. Frozen Fruit Blends

Some frozen fruits are still relatively cheap, but if you start getting into blends, you've entered "too expensive to purchase" territory. Grab your berries when they're on sale or in-season and freeze them yourself. 

CVS

23. Diapers and Wipes

If you're in your diapers and wipes buying stage of life, we feel the pain of your wallet. But take it from us: your grocery store doesn't have the best deals on such items. Buy in bulk at Costco or Sam's or order them on Amazon and you're sure to pay a better price.

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24. Toilet Paper & Paper Towel

We all remember when COVID struck in 2020 and you had to buy toilet paper wherever it was readily available. Folks have since calmed down and stopped the TP hoarding and we're here to say that the only place to buy your paper products is Sam's or Costco. Only at the grocery store in a pinch, if you have coupons, or there's an impossible-to-resist sale.

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25. Vitamins

Grocery stores have an entire aisle devoted to vitamins, but that doesn't mean you should spend your money on them. Outside of sales, vitamin prices at the grocery store don't stack up against the likes of Costco. 

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26. Batteries

Batteries are a giant no-no at the grocery store. You can absolutely find these cheaper elsewhere, like Amazon, Costco, or Sam's Club.

Tylenol, Walmart, 11/2015, by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube #Tylenol by Mike Mozart (CC BY)

27. Over-the-Counter Medications

Like vitamins, the price of over-the-counter medications like allergy meds or pain relief is available in better deals at wholesale clubs than grocery stores.

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28. Paper Plates

Paper plates have gotten so expensive that it almost doesn't feel like a joke anymore to refer to them as "fine china." The best way to buy these is by going to Costco or Sam's instead of the grocery store.

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29. Probiotic Sodas

Probiotic sodas are all the rage right now and they have the price tag to prove it. If you've got to hop on this craze, do it with the help of Costco or Sam's Club because the grocery store doesn't do you many favors in the mark-down department on these.