Aldi vs Lidl: pricing and where each wins
A short, honest comparison of Aldi and Lidl on price, positioning, and the categories where the gap actually shows up.
Aldi
established US discount grocer.
Lidl
newer US discount grocer (also German).
Who usually wins on price
Roughly tied on staples; Lidl tends to win on baked goods and premium meat, Aldi wins on dairy and dry goods.
That said, no rule of thumb beats checking unit price on the exact SKU you buy. Loyalty card pricing, store-specific promotions, and regional variation can flip a category in either direction.
Categories where the gap usually appears
How to actually check
The fastest way to settle this for your basket: pick three SKUs you buy at one store and check the unit price at the other. Use the Compare page on PriceActually - enter the price and size at each store and we will normalize the unit price and tell you which is cheaper per gram or ounce.
Build a small habit of checking three items per shopping trip. Within a month you will have a real picture of which store wins for the way you shop, not for some average household.
Frequently asked questions
Is Aldi or Lidl cheaper overall?
It depends on your basket. The headline answer is a rule of thumb. The honest answer is: check three SKUs that you actually buy. Aldi and Lidl can flip positions in different categories.
Should I switch from Lidl to Aldi?
If three categories you care about are cheaper per unit and the drive is comparable, yes. If only one category is meaningfully cheaper, stay where you are - the friction of switching often outweighs the savings.
Does loyalty card pricing change the answer?
Often yes. Both Aldi and Lidl use pricing differently with their loyalty programs. Always compare the price you would actually pay, not the regular shelf price.
Compare Aldi and Lidl prices now
Pick a product, enter price and size at each store, see who wins per unit.
More store comparisons
We are not affiliated with Aldi or Lidl. Crowd-sourced data, not official pricing.
PriceActually provides price signals and estimates, not financial advice or guaranteed market pricing.