Aldi hails record Christmas as hard-up shoppers ditch ‘big four’ supermarkets
Aldi has had its best-ever Christmas as hard-up shoppers ditched Britain’s “big four” supermarkets to find cheaper groceries.
Sales at the German discounter hit a record £1.65bn in the four weeks to Christmas Eve, marking a 3pc increase on last year.
Aldi said customers spent a total of £500m in the final week before Christmas Day, with 57 million transactions in stores taking place across the entire festive period.
The discounter said it gained millions of shoppers from rivals such as Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons and Asda over Christmas, as many were seeking “to make their money go further during the festive season”.
Giles Hurley, Aldi’s UK and Ireland chief executive, said the record Christmas performance came during what was “a challenging time for many”.
Aldi is typically able to set lower prices than rivals because it stocks fewer different products, allowing it to secure better deals from suppliers. It claimed to be selling the UK’s cheapest Christmas dinner last month.
The figures from Aldi mark the first in a flurry of festive trading updates from retailers, with Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Marks & Spencer due to report later this week.
Investors will be watching closely for signs of pain among retailers after warnings that households were set to spend less over Christmas owing to weaker consumer confidence.
Figures from Barclays last month showed that UK shoppers cut spending at the fastest pace since the pandemic began in November.
On Boxing Day, footfall data suggested many people were staying away from town centres and shunning high street sales. By 3pm, high street footfall was down 1.5pc on last year, according to MRI Software figures.
A separate KPMG study found that two thirds of Britons fear the UK economy is going backwards.
It has fuelled concerns about a tough January for retailers, with the fallout from the Budget expected to spill over into weaker spending.
Experts have suggested that Labour’s freeze on income tax thresholds – which will push millions into higher tax bands – will prompt people to reduce spending and save more.
Jenni Matthews, of MRI Software, said: “We know consumers were feeling an air of caution in the lead-up to the Budget being announced, and it could be resulting in consumers looking to start saving their pennies now. But we’ll feel the full impact of that as we head into 2026.”
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2026/01/05/aldi-hails-best-christmas-shoppers-ditch-big-supermarkets/