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Slowdown at till as heatwave spending cools down

UK supermarket sales growth
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Total Till sales growth at UK supermarkets slowed (+3.7 per cent) in the last four weeks ending 9th August 2025. This is down from +5.8 per cent recorded in July, according to new data released today by NielsenIQ (NIQ).

NIQ data suggests that following the early summer heatwaves at the end of June and early July, along with treating themselves over a fantastic summer of sports, UK shoppers chose to dial back spend to save money with the growth in food inflation to 4 per cent also becoming top of mind.


This led to a drop in average spend per visit (-3.1 per cent) compared to this time last year; however, visits increased (+6.2 per cent) as shoppers took advantage of retailers’ promotional spend, which accounted for 23 per cent of all value sales across all stores.

With shoppers looking for a more budget friendly, quick meal solutions, ‘Dinner for Tonight’ shopping missions are increasing, with one in five shopping trips consisting of quick, small baskets of fresh food, chilled meat and fruit and vegetables.

Also amongst the fresh and ambient categories in growth were dried vegetables and pulses (+28 per cent), fresh pastry and dough (+15 per cent) and packaged grocery (+4.2 per cent).

Frozen fruit also saw strong demand, growing (+13.2 per cent) in value and in units (+7.0 per cent) as shoppers turned to versatile, waste-free options for smoothies, crumbles and breakfast pots.

In terms of retailer performance, Ocado (+14.1 per cent) continued to outperform both stores and online channels, whilst Lidl (+11.2 per cent) had a strong increase in new shoppers with almost one in two UK households (49 per cent) shopping at Lidl over the last twelve weeks.

Mike Watkins, Head of Retailer and Business Insight at NielsenIQ, said, “After the three heatwaves in early summer, this reset was expected and the slowdown in spend was felt across the industry.

"The exception being the discounter channel where growth was more buoyant at +6.6 per cent.

"The convenience channel was particularly impacted with sales down -1.1 per centas was the online grocery channel at -2.2 per cent."

Watkins adds, “The start of peak summer holidays also disrupted shopping habits more than usual as the uptick in food inflation would have given many shoppers a reason to delay some non-essential spend for a few weeks.

"However, with shoppers looking to dine in at home, in the summer this often means more alfresco with barbeques replacing some meals out or ordered in. Supermarkets will be optimistic about a strong end to summer 2025."