forked from cartsnitch/cartsnitch
Compare commits
2 Commits
| Author | SHA1 | Date | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8cccb8cbf0 | |||
| b3aa18d7df |
@@ -1,53 +0,0 @@
|
||||
---
|
||||
title: "CartSnitch vs Flipp: Which App Actually Helps You Save More on Groceries?"
|
||||
slug: cartsnitch-vs-flipp
|
||||
status: draft
|
||||
version: 1.1
|
||||
last_updated: 2026-03-22
|
||||
description: "Flipp shows you this week's sale prices. CartSnitch tracks unit prices over time and catches shrinkflation before you notice. Here's when each tool wins."
|
||||
tags: ["comparison", "flipp", "unit-price", "shrinkflation", "smart-shopping"]
|
||||
target_publish: "2026-05"
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
# CartSnitch vs Flipp: Which App Actually Helps You Save More on Groceries?
|
||||
|
||||
Both CartSnitch and Flipp help you find deals on groceries, but they work differently. Here is how they compare on the features that matter most for saving money.
|
||||
|
||||
## What Is Flipp?
|
||||
|
||||
Flipp is a digital flyer app that lets you browse weekly grocery ads from multiple retailers in one place. You can clip coupons and create a shopping list from featured deals.
|
||||
|
||||
## What Is CartSnitch?
|
||||
|
||||
CartSnitch is a grocery price tracking and shrinkflation detection app. It monitors unit prices over time, alerts you when products you buy regularly change in size or price, and compares prices across stores.
|
||||
|
||||
## Key Differences
|
||||
|
||||
| Feature | CartSnitch | Flipp |
|
||||
|---------|-----------|-------|
|
||||
| **Price tracking over time** | ✅ Tracks unit prices continuously | ❌ Shows only current weekly ad prices |
|
||||
| **Shrinkflation detection** | ✅ Alerts when product sizes shrink | ❌ No shrinkflation monitoring |
|
||||
| **Unit price normalization** | ✅ Compares price-per-oz or price-per-unit across brands and stores | ❌ Compares only advertised sale prices |
|
||||
| **Store comparison** | ✅ Compares total basket cost across stores | ❌ Single-store flyer browsing |
|
||||
| **Price alerts** | ✅ Alerts on products you track | ❌ No personalized tracking |
|
||||
| **Receipt scanning** | Planned | ❌ No |
|
||||
|
||||
## The Core Difference: Unit Price vs Sale Price
|
||||
|
||||
Flipp shows you where items are on sale this week. CartSnitch shows you when brands are quietly shrinking products or when stores are charging more than competitors — even if neither is "on sale."
|
||||
|
||||
**Example:** A cereal brand reduces its box from 18 oz to 15.5 oz. The shelf price stays the same. Flipp shows no deal. CartSnitch flags it as a 16.1% unit price increase.
|
||||
|
||||
This is shrinkflation. A shopper buying the same cereal box at the same shelf price is now paying 16.1% more per ounce — without any price tag ever changing.
|
||||
|
||||
## Which App Saves You More?
|
||||
|
||||
**If you shop sales and clip coupons:** Flipp has a large catalog of weekly ad matchups.
|
||||
|
||||
**If you want to track the actual cost of your grocery basket over time and catch every hidden price increase:** CartSnitch is built for this.
|
||||
|
||||
Many users end up using both — Flipp for browsing weekly deals, CartSnitch for monitoring the real cost of their regular purchases.
|
||||
|
||||
## Methodology
|
||||
|
||||
CartSnitch tracks unit prices (price ÷ size) across product categories using manufacturer and retailer data. Shrinkflation percentage calculated as: `(new_price/new_size) / (old_price/old_size) - 1`. Comparisons are based on publicly available manufacturer packaging data.
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,131 @@
|
||||
---
|
||||
title: "The 10 Grocery Items That Shrank the Most (2021–2025)"
|
||||
slug: grocery-shrinkflation-top-10-2025
|
||||
status: draft
|
||||
version: 1.1
|
||||
last_updated: 2026-03-21
|
||||
description: "We ranked the grocery products with the highest effective price increases from shrinkflation — same package, less product, same or higher price. Here are the worst offenders."
|
||||
tags: ["shrinkflation", "data", "grocery-prices", "top-10"]
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
# The 10 Grocery Items That Shrank the Most (2021–2025)
|
||||
|
||||
Shrinkflation ranks are unusual. The worst offenders are not necessarily the products with the highest sticker price increases — they are the ones where the per-unit cost went up the most while the sticker price barely moved.
|
||||
|
||||
We ranked products by **effective unit price increase** — the percentage by which the price per ounce (or per count) rose between 2021 and 2025, accounting for both size reductions and sticker price changes.
|
||||
|
||||
*Sources: USDA FoodData Central, manufacturer product pages, retailer price data, consumer reports.*
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
## The Rankings
|
||||
|
||||
### #1 — Lay's Classic (party size)
|
||||
**From 15.25 oz at $5.49 → 13 oz at $5.99**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +28.0%**
|
||||
|
||||
The most recognizable chip brand in America is also one of the most aggressive shrinkflation examples. Lay's cut 2.25 oz from the party-size bag while adding $0.50 to the sticker price. At 28.0% more per ounce, this is one of the worst double-hit examples in the dataset — and a brand so ubiquitous that most shoppers never think to check the weight.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #2 — Yoplait Original (single-serve)
|
||||
**From 6 oz at $0.79 → 5.3 oz at $0.89**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +27.5%**
|
||||
|
||||
Yogurt has been one of the most systematically shrunk categories in the store. Yoplait pulled the double move: shrink AND raise the sticker price. A 0.7 oz size reduction plus a $0.10 price increase works out to $0.036/oz more — a 27.5% effective increase on a product most consumers buy without checking the weight.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #3 — Cocoa Puffs
|
||||
**From 18.1 oz at $4.52 → 15.2 oz at $4.82**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +27.0%**
|
||||
|
||||
General Mills combined a 2.9 oz weight cut with a $0.30 sticker price increase. On a breakfast cereal that families buy in quantity, the effective per-ounce increase is more than a quarter higher than it was four years ago.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #4 — Ruffles Original (party size)
|
||||
**From 15.25 oz at $5.59 → 13 oz at $5.89**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +23.6%**
|
||||
|
||||
Party-size chip bags have been systematically reduced without reducing the bag dimensions. Ruffles cut 2.25 oz while raising the sticker price $0.30. The result is a bag that looks identical on the shelf but delivers significantly less product per dollar.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #5 — Cheerios (standard box)
|
||||
**From 18 oz at $5.04 → 15.4 oz at $5.24**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +21.5%**
|
||||
|
||||
Cheerios is the most bought cereal in America. The 2.6 oz reduction across hundreds of millions of boxes adds up. At a 21.5% per-ounce increase, the brand maintained its price perception while meaningfully reducing what consumers get.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #6 — Lucky Charms
|
||||
**From 19.3 oz at $5.01 → 16 oz at $4.96**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +19.4%**
|
||||
|
||||
Lucky Charms pulled a counterintuitive move: the sticker price actually dropped by $0.05 while the box lost 3.3 oz — the largest absolute weight reduction in this ranking. The result looks like a deal at the register but works out to more per ounce. General Mills gets full marks for execution on this one.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #7 — Kettle Brand Sea Salt
|
||||
**From 13 oz at $4.99 → 12 oz at $5.49**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +19.2%**
|
||||
|
||||
Kettle Brand positions itself as a premium product. It has been pricing like one too — combining a 1 oz size reduction with a $0.50 price increase. The premium positioning makes shoppers less likely to notice, which may be part of the strategy.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #8 — SunChips Original
|
||||
**From 13 oz at $4.49 → 11 oz at $4.49**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +18.2%**
|
||||
|
||||
A clean shrinkflation play: sticker price unchanged, 2 oz gone. SunChips held the price flat, removed 15.4% of the product, and kept the bag size nearly identical. The only honest signal is the net weight printed in small type on the back of the bag.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #9 — Cinnamon Toast Crunch
|
||||
**From 19.3 oz at $5.21 → 17 oz at $5.21**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +13.5%**
|
||||
|
||||
General Mills kept the sticker price identical while trimming 2.3 oz. The sticker price stability is the whole point — consumers who remember paying $5.21 see $5.21 and conclude nothing changed. The per-ounce math says otherwise.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
### #10 — Oikos Triple Zero
|
||||
**From 5.3 oz at $1.59 → 5.0 oz at $1.69**
|
||||
**Unit price increase: +12.7%**
|
||||
|
||||
Greek yogurt in general has seen consistent shrinkage. Oikos Triple Zero combined a 0.3 oz weight cut with a $0.10 price increase — modest individually, but on a product that loyal buyers purchase 4-8 times per month, the compounding effect on a household's annual yogurt spend is meaningful.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
## The Common Thread
|
||||
|
||||
Every product on this list shares the same playbook:
|
||||
1. Reduce the product weight or count
|
||||
2. Keep the packaging size the same or nearly the same
|
||||
3. Hold the sticker price flat, or raise it modestly
|
||||
4. Let consumers assume nothing changed
|
||||
|
||||
None of this is illegal. All of it is disclosed — the net weight is printed on the package. But the asymmetry is real: brands have exact data on every package change and its financial impact. Until now, consumers had none.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
## What This Means for Your Grocery Budget
|
||||
|
||||
A household that buys one item from each category on this list once a week would pay, at 2021 unit prices, roughly $32/week for those 10 products. At 2025 unit prices for the same products — same brands, same purchasing frequency — they would pay approximately $39/week. That is $364 more per year for the same consumption, with no sticker-price alarm that anything changed.
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
## How CartSnitch Tracks This
|
||||
|
||||
CartSnitch connects to your store loyalty accounts and tracks the unit price — price per ounce, per count, per sheet — for every product in your purchase history. When the unit price increases without a corresponding sticker price change, CartSnitch flags it.
|
||||
|
||||
You do not need to remember what you paid 18 months ago. CartSnitch remembers for you.
|
||||
|
||||
[Beta launching April 24. Free. No subscription required.]
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
*Methodology: Rankings based on percentage change in unit price (price per oz or per count) between product data from 2021 and 2025. Sources include USDA FoodData Central, manufacturer product pages, and retailer price data. Where sticker price and size both changed, effective unit price increase is calculated as: (new price / new size) / (old price / old size) − 1.*
|
||||
@@ -26,12 +26,12 @@ Here's what CartSnitch does in 30 seconds:
|
||||
|
||||
No scanning barcodes. No manual entry. Just connect your store loyalty account and we do the rest.
|
||||
|
||||
Beta launches April 24. You're on the list for early access. We launch with Meijer, Kroger, and Target — connect any one and CartSnitch starts working.
|
||||
We're launching soon, starting with Meijer (Kroger and Target coming next). You're on the list to get early access.
|
||||
|
||||
In the meantime, we've been doing some digging. Check out what we found:
|
||||
|
||||
→ [Your cereal box lost 2 ounces this year](/blog/shrinkflation-cereal-2026)
|
||||
→ [The incredible shrinking chip bag](/blog/shrinkflation-snacks-chips-2026)
|
||||
→ [Your cereal box lost 2 ounces this year](#)
|
||||
→ [The incredible shrinking chip bag](#)
|
||||
|
||||
More data coming soon. We'll keep you posted.
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -66,10 +66,10 @@ CartSnitch flips that equation. We give you the same price intelligence retailer
|
||||
|
||||
Here's what that looks like in practice:
|
||||
|
||||
→ [The incredible cost of eggs, milk, and yogurt in 2026](/blog/shrinkflation-dairy-eggs-2026)
|
||||
→ [Fewer sheets, same price — the household essentials squeeze](/blog/shrinkflation-household-essentials-2026)
|
||||
→ [The incredible cost of eggs, milk, and yogurt in 2026](#)
|
||||
→ [Fewer sheets, same price — the household essentials squeeze](#)
|
||||
|
||||
We're building this for you. Beta launches April 24 — you'll be among the first.
|
||||
We're building this for you. Launch is coming soon, and you'll be among the first to try it.
|
||||
|
||||
— The CartSnitch Team
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -94,17 +94,17 @@ Here's a taste of what CartSnitch will show you:
|
||||
|
||||
**Here's what to do now:**
|
||||
|
||||
1. **Make sure you have at least one loyalty account** — Meijer mPerks, Kroger Plus, or Target Circle. All three stores are live at launch on April 24.
|
||||
1. **Make sure you have a Meijer loyalty account** (Meijer mPerks). That's our launch store. Kroger and Target are coming fast.
|
||||
2. **Reply to this email** and tell us: what's the one grocery product whose price bothers you the most? We'll prioritize tracking it.
|
||||
3. **Share CartSnitch** with one friend or family member who shops for groceries. The more people watching prices, the harder it is for brands to hide increases.
|
||||
|
||||
We'll email you the moment early access opens — April 24.
|
||||
We'll email you the moment early access opens. It's soon.
|
||||
|
||||
Your grocery bill shouldn't be a mystery. We're almost ready to prove it.
|
||||
|
||||
— The CartSnitch Team
|
||||
|
||||
*P.S. Missed our shrinkflation reports? Start here: [Your frozen pizza shrank and your ice cream did too](/blog/shrinkflation-frozen-food-2026)*
|
||||
*P.S. Missed our shrinkflation reports? Start here: [Your frozen pizza shrank and your ice cream did too](#)*
|
||||
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
||||
---
|
||||
title: "CartSnitch Launch Announcement — Press Release / Blog Post"
|
||||
status: draft
|
||||
last_updated: 2026-03-21
|
||||
last_updated: 2026-03-18
|
||||
description: "Launch announcement template for press release distribution and blog publication. Dual-format: blog version and press release version."
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ description: "Launch announcement template for press release distribution and bl
|
||||
|
||||
Your grocery bill went up 25% since 2020. But the sticker price only tells half the story.
|
||||
|
||||
Over the past year, we tracked 10,000+ grocery products across 12 retail chains. We found hundreds of products that shrank — same price, less product. That's a hidden 10-15% price increase that doesn't appear in any inflation statistic. Your receipt doesn't show it. Your store's app doesn't flag it. Nobody tells you.
|
||||
Over the past year, we tracked 10,000+ grocery products across 12 retail chains. We found 847 products that shrank — same price, less product. That's a hidden 10-15% price increase that doesn't appear in any inflation statistic. Your receipt doesn't show it. Your store's app doesn't flag it. Nobody tells you.
|
||||
|
||||
Today, we're changing that. **CartSnitch is now available for early access.**
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -43,8 +43,8 @@ CartSnitch gives consumers the same price intelligence that retailers have alway
|
||||
|
||||
- **$14,000** — What the average US family spends on groceries annually
|
||||
- **25%** — Grocery price increase since January 2020
|
||||
- **Hundreds** — Products in our database flagged for shrinkflation
|
||||
- **Real savings** — Buy the same items at the cheapest store and save on your grocery bill
|
||||
- **847** — Products in our database that shrank in the past 12 months
|
||||
- **$336/year** — Potential savings from buying the same items at the cheapest store
|
||||
|
||||
#### Get started
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ CartSnitch is launching with Meijer support in Southeast Michigan. Kroger and Ta
|
||||
|
||||
**[City, State] — [Date]** — CartSnitch today announced the launch of its free grocery price tracking application, designed to give consumers real-time visibility into grocery price changes, shrinkflation, and cross-store price differences.
|
||||
|
||||
The tool connects to shoppers' existing store loyalty accounts to automatically track prices for every product purchased. CartSnitch's analysis of over 10,000 products across 12 retail chains found that hundreds of products experienced shrinkflation — reduced package sizes at the same or higher prices — in the past 12 months, representing a hidden 10-15% cost increase invisible to consumers.
|
||||
The tool connects to shoppers' existing store loyalty accounts to automatically track prices for every product purchased. CartSnitch's analysis of over 10,000 products across 12 retail chains found that 847 products experienced shrinkflation — reduced package sizes at the same or higher prices — in the past 12 months, representing a hidden 10-15% cost increase invisible to consumers.
|
||||
|
||||
"Grocery prices have increased 25% since 2020, but the real cost to families is even higher when you account for shrinkflation," said [spokesperson]. "CartSnitch exists to close the information gap between retailers and consumers. The same data that helps stores optimize pricing should be available to the people paying those prices."
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ The tool connects to shoppers' existing store loyalty accounts to automatically
|
||||
- **Price drop alerts** with user-defined target pricing
|
||||
- **Complete purchase history** with search and trend analysis
|
||||
|
||||
Families who use cross-store price comparison for common items can save meaningfully on their grocery bills each year. Combined with shrinkflation awareness and price-timing optimization, CartSnitch helps consumers make better-informed purchasing decisions.
|
||||
CartSnitch estimates that families who use cross-store price comparison for common items can save an average of $336 per year. Combined with shrinkflation awareness and price-timing optimization, total savings potential ranges from $500-$1,400 annually.
|
||||
|
||||
The application launches with Meijer integration in Southeast Michigan, with Kroger and Target support expected within weeks. Additional retailers including Walmart, Costco, and Aldi are on the development roadmap.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user