← NewsAll
United Kingdom news is currently paused for latest updates. We'll resume retrieval when enough requests come in.
UK shoppers buy more fruit and yoghurt in healthy start to 2026
Summary
Worldpanel by Numerator found annual grocery inflation eased to 4% in the four weeks to 25 January, and shoppers increased purchases of fresh fruit, yoghurt and other healthy staples while own-label products took a record share of spending.
Content
Britons began 2026 by buying more fruit, yoghurt and other healthy foods as many aimed for new-year health goals. Research from Worldpanel by Numerator shows annual grocery inflation eased to 4% in the four weeks to 25 January, down from 4.7% in December. Shoppers also increased purchases of own-label products after record December grocery spending. Retailers reported mixed sales results across chains.
Key facts:
- Annual grocery inflation fell to 4% in the four weeks to 25 January, down from 4.7% in December.
- Sales volumes rose year on year for fresh fruit and dried pulses (+6%), fresh fish (+5%), poultry (+3%) and chilled yoghurt (+4%); cottage cheese sales jumped 50% and reached 2.8 million households, 600,000 more than last year.
- Nearly a quarter of shoppers sought high-protein foods and more than a quarter sought high-fibre products.
- Own-label products accounted for 52.2% of grocery spending, the highest share recorded to date.
- Spending on promotions grew 10.9% year on year, while full-price sales rose 1.7% over the same period.
- Lidl was the fastest-growing physical chain with sales up 10.1% over 12 weeks to 25 January; Ocado's sales rose 14.1% and its market share increased to 2.1%; Asda and the Co-op recorded sales declines of 3.7% and 1.6% respectively.
Summary:
The snapshot points to shoppers prioritising familiar, nutrient-rich staples and more budget-conscious own-label choices, alongside a modest easing in grocery inflation. These shifts have supported take-home sales growth and altered retailer market shares. Undetermined at this time.
