Covid shopping

UK shoppers spent a total of £7.1bn at UK supermarkets in the two weeks ending 25 December with weekly sales peaking at +14.8 per cent, reveals new data released today (11 January) by NielsenIQ.

This figure exceeds previous forecasts from analysts at NielsenIQ, in which sales were predicted to grow to £6.8bn, up from £6.7bn in 2020.

Data from NielsenIQ reveals that Total Till grocery sales across the four weeks ending 1 January 2022 grew by +1.0 per cent. This is an impressive growth rate, Nielsen analysts say, as it is against strong comparatives in 2020, where sales had accelerated +8 per cent in anticipation of a full lockdown from 4 January 2021.

According to data from NielsenIQ, online shopping visits fell -1.7 per cent over the four week period whilst in-store visits jumped to +6.3 per cent. This reflects the changing shopping behaviours of UK consumers, who are continuing to embrace an omnichannel shopping mindset.

With shoppers encouraged to book online slots well in advance of Christmas, Brits then opted to shop in-store for last minute essentials in the final two weeks. As a result, NielsenIQ data shows that there were 27m more in-store visits during this four week period compared to 2020, leading to the online share of grocery sales falling to 11.3 per cent, compared to 12.1 per cent in December 2020. This is the lowest online share since the 11.6 per cent of April 2020 following the start of the pandemic.

With weaker comparatives and shoppers in the mood to enjoy Christmas this year, M&S (+9.4%) was the fastest growing food retailer over the 12 week period, whilst Lidl (+8.5%) and Aldi (+4.8%) both benefited from an accelerated new store opening programme. Tesco (-0.1%) and Waitrose (-0.2%) also gained market share.

Mike Watkins, NielsenIQ’s UK head of retailer and business insight, said: “Omnichannel purchasing, shopping around, and entertaining at home were the big shopping trends over the festive period. All retailers had more shoppers than this time last year and most had more visits, even if spend per visit was a little lower at just over £21. British consumers are continuing to adopt an omnichannel approach and whilst online allows them to plan ahead, shoppers are increasingly heading in-store for a regular weekly shop as well as for last-minute purchases and we can expect this behaviour to continue.”

Watkins concluded: “It was a good Christmas for food retailers with overall performance in line with expectations in the last three months, and against some very tough comparatives last December and in a very competitive retail environment. Shoppers were willing to buy the extra Christmas indulgences and temporarily put aside their concerns about the rising cost of living. Looking ahead, consumers are facing significantly higher energy, travel and other household costs so it’s likely that shoppers will look to make savings on their weekly food shop by managing budgets. We may see them buying what they need when they need it, wasting less fresh food, and steering clear of unnecessary cupboard stocking. This would give added momentum to the return of the ‘little and more often’ macro trend we are anticipating as we hopefully leave behind the pandemic shopping behaviour in the new year.”