1. The “Loyalty Tax” by the Numbers (March 2026)
The math of 2026 is simple: Information beats points.
| Strategy | Typical Return | Annual Impact (Avg Family) |
| Loyalty Cards Only | 0.5% (Points) | +$50 in vouchers |
| Splitting the Shop | 28.0% (Cash) | -$3,900 in expenses |
| Generic Brand Pivot | 60.0% (Cash) | -$2,132 in expenses |
The 2026 Reality: You would need to spend $800,000 at a single supermarket to earn enough points to match the cash savings a savvy “Split-Shopper” makes in just one year.
2. The 2026 “Split-Shop” Playbook
To beat the duopoly in 2026, you must categorize your list into three buying zones:
- Zone 1: The Aldi “Baseline” (Pantry & Snacks)
Items like snacks, nuts, and baking staples are often 30–50% cheaper at Aldi. For example, Weiss bars are $5.99 at Aldi vs. $9.50 at Coles in March 2026. - Zone 2: The Coles/Woolies “Specials” (Branded Goods)
Only buy “Big Brand” items (detergents, soft drinks, specific cereals) when they hit the 50% off cycle. Buying these at full price is the primary driver of the loyalty tax. - Zone 3: The “Generic” Switch (Medication & Cleaning)
Compare the Market’s 2026 data shows switching to generic paracetamol saves 81%, while generic disinfectant saves 72% over name brands.
3. The 2026 Tech Toolkit
In 2026, you don’t need to walk between three stores to compare prices. Use these verified tools:
- WiseList: Trusted by 300,000+ Australians to instantly compare “Basket Totals” across Coles, Woolies, and Aldi.
- Grocerize: The 2026 “loyalty tax” calculator that shows you exactly which items are driving up your bill at your preferred store.
- The “July 1” Regulation: Keep in mind that a new ban on excessive grocery pricing comes into effect on July 1, 2026, for retailers with $30B+ revenue (Coles and Woolworths). Until then, the “tax” remains entirely in your hands to avoid.






