Which Retailer Has Cheaper Grocery Prices, Target or Walmart?

MANAGE MONEY - SHOPPING
We compared a dozen grocery items you’re probably buying this week to see which retailer is the cheapest.
Updated Jan. 31, 2024
Fact checked
 woman walking to the car after shopping at the supermarket

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Grocery retailers Walmart and Target both claim to have the lowest grocery prices, but they can’t both be the cheapest. And knowing which truly does have the bargains could be a big help if you’re trying to beat the costs of inflation.

But the only way to know for sure which of the two mega-stores is truly the cheapest is by comparing prices on items that are the closest in content and size as possible.

We looked at a selection of 12 grocery items, six breakfast items, and six summer grilling necessities, and compared each retailer’s everyday prices to determine which chain truly has the lowest prices.

A gallon of store-brand whole milk

Yingko/Adobe Pouring milk from bottle into a glass

Target: $3.29

Walmart: $3.36

Americans still consume more cow milk than any other kind of milk, and Americans use more whole milk than any other kind of cow milk. In 2021, we drank an average of 1,216 million pounds of whole milk every month, compared with an average of 1,119 million pounds of 2% milk and only 207 million pounds of skim (fat-free) milk every month.

Loaf of Nature's Own Whole Wheat Bread

beats_/Adobe  bread and bread rolls and cutted bread

Target: $3.49

Walmart: $3.34

Despite the number of people who avoid gluten for medical or general health reasons, we still eat a lot of bread and bread products made from wheat.

Almost 193 million Americans ate whole wheat or multigrain bread at least once in 2020. Since there are 330 million people in the United States, this means that 58% of the country ate at least some whole wheat or multigrain bread that year.

Land O’Lakes Salted Butter

JHVEPhoto/Adobe Land O Lakes Salted and Unsalted Butter

Target: $5.99

Walmart: $5.78

Toasted bread tastes best with real butter from cow milk. Land O’Lakes butter brand was started in 1921 by a group of dairy farmers from Minnesota, the state known as “the land of 10,000 lakes.” A hundred and one years later, the package still says,s “Farmer Owned” because the company is still owned by participating dairy farmers.

Bananas

phpetrunina14/Adobe woman taking yellow bananas from the store shelf

Target: $0.25 each

Walmart: $0.26 each

While apples and oranges lead the total consumption of fruit and juice, bananas are still the most popular fresh fruit in the country, with each American eating an average of 13.4 pounds of fresh bananas per year.

Large cage-free eggs

jarunee/Adobe Raw free range eggs in egg box

Target: $3.59 per dozen

Walmart: $3.68 per dozen

The No. 1 breakfast food in the country is eggs, according to a survey of 2,000 Americans conducted in 2021. Of the respondents to the survey, 65% said that eggs were their “go-to” for breakfast, compared with 56% that chose cereal and only 52% that chose coffee.

Smoked thick-cut bacon

Korta/Adobe man in a supermarket buying sliced bacon

Target: $4.69

Walmart: $4.48

The same survey that found that eggs were the most popular breakfast food choice for Americans also found that 42% of the respondents ate bacon for breakfast.

Ben & Jerry’s Cherry Garcia ice cream

Steve Cukrov/Adobe Ben and Jerrys tribute flavor to the rock legend Jerry Garcia

Target: $4.99 per pint

Walmart: $4.48 per pint

Americans eat an average of 23 gallons of ice cream per year, which is 184 pints per person per year. While Americans eat ice cream year-round, including in the winter, the third Sunday of July is National Ice Cream Day.

All-natural 80/20 ground beef

Joshua Resnick/Adobe browned ground beef in cast iron skillet

Target: $5.99 per pound

Walmart: $4.78 per pound

Summer is the best time for grilling hamburgers outside. Hamburgers taste better grilled, and grilled burgers are better with fatty meat.

The 80% lean, 20% fat mix of ground beef, called ground chuck, is the optimal blend for grilling for juicy, fatty, flavorful burgers.

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Pepperidge Farm Sesame-Topped Hamburger Buns

Tatiana/Adobe Hamburger Building Kit

Target: $3.39 for 8

Walmart: $3.28 for 8

Americans eat 50 billion hamburgers per year, which works out to be 156 burgers per person, per year.

Kraft American cheese singles

The Toidi/Adobe Kraft American cheese single slice packages

Target: $4.19 for 16 slices

Walmart: $4.28 for 16 slices

The cheeseburger was invented in 1934 in Kentucky by putting a slice of American cheese on top of a burger, and American cheese is still one of the most popular cheeses for cheeseburgers.

Heinz ketchup

jetcityimage/Adobe Kraft Heinz branded organic ketchup

Target: $4.59 for 32 ounces

Walmart: $4.28 for 32 ounces

Heinz is the most popular brand of ketchup in the United States, with almost 198 million Americans, or 60% of Americans, having eaten Heinz ketchup in 2020.

Romaine lettuce hearts

Brent Hofacker/Adobe Raw Green Organic Romaine Lettuce

Target: $3.49 for three

Walmart: $3.24 for three

While iceberg lettuce is popular on burgers, romaine holds up better and gets less soggy on a hot burger. Romaine hearts can also be brushed with olive oil and grilled as a side vegetable.

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And the winner is…

Sundry Photography/Adobe Walmart storefront

Both Target and Walmart carry a huge range of name-brand food products, and each retailer has its own store brand.

These store brands don’t cover all the foods sold, but they cover a surprisingly large selection of food items, many of which are very close in quality to each other. This makes comparing prices simple since we could compare identical amounts and formulations, both for name-brand and store-brand products.

We totaled up our set of 12 key foods to see which retailer really was the cheapest.

  • Target total: $47.84
  • Walmart total: $45.24

Target is $2.60, or 5.4%, more expensive than Walmart for this set of a dozen grocery items.

Bottom line

While chasing low prices is one of the best ways to boost your bank account, with gas prices as high as they are, this tiny price difference isn’t worth going to both stores. 

Go to the store you were already planning to go to, so you don’t waste gas. Over time, and over a bigger range of foods, the prices are likely to even out no matter which retailer you choose.

Of course, regardless of the everyday prices of these grocery items, Target’s price match policy means that if you buy a name-brand item at Target and can show a printed price in a circular or ad from another retailer, including Walmart, Target will match that price.

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Author Details

Elizabeth Rollins Elizabeth Rollins has degrees in literature and business, and she's combined these loves into a career in writing about personal finance. Her special areas of interest are debt, value, budgeting, education, and retirement.

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