º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Tesco and Sainsbury's loyalty schemes help shoppers save, says regulator

The Competition and Markets Authority has been investigating loyalty schemes at major supermarkets including Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, Morrisons and Waitrose since November last year

(Image: (Image: Getty))

A year-long investigation into º£½ÇÊÓÆµ supermarkets’ pricing practices has found "very little" evidence that shoppers are being treated unfairly with loyalty programmes such as the Tesco Clubcard scheme and Sainsbury’s Nectar points.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) probe, which has been ongoing since November last year, investigated whether supermarket loyalty schemes cause inflation by faking the savings consumers hope to achieve when using the rewards programmes, as reported by .

However, its review found that shoppers who are members of a loyalty scheme—97 per cent of customers in total—can "almost always make a genuine saving on the usual price by buying loyalty-priced products."

"Having analysed around 50,000 grocery products on a loyalty price promotion, the CMA found very little evidence of supermarkets inflating their ‘usual’ prices to make loyalty promotions seem like a better deal", the watchdog said. It found the average savings on products with loyalty pricing on schemes such as the Tesco Clubcard ranged from 17 per cent to 25 per cent across the five supermarkets examined.

In addition, the CMA found that shoppers who do not sign up to a loyalty scheme membership generally pay the same price during the loyalty price promotion as they do in the weeks both before and after loyalty price promotions, which should "give shoppers confidence that they are not being treated unfairly", the body said.

However, the watchdog noted that several products with loyalty pricing were significantly more expensive than the lowest price available at other supermarkets, indicating "there is value in shopping around."

The CMA found that 61 of the 429 products with a loyalty price it examined were cheaper at other supermarkets. This investigation forms part of the watchdog’s ongoing efforts to ensure fair deals amidst the cost of living crisis.

It was initiated following a two-year CMA investigation which revealed that three-quarters of branded suppliers in products such as baby formula, baked beans, mayonnaise, and pet food increased their prices faster than their costs, contributing to higher food price inflation by increasing unit profitability. Sue Davies, Which? Head of food policy, commented: "Two-tier loyalty pricing has become a common practice across retailers. It’s therefore reassuring that the CMA has found that most of the prices it looked at across supermarkets offered genuine savings against the usual price. However, it stresses that it is worth shopping around as they aren’t always the cheapest option."