What €20 Gets You In Germany | Grocery Shopping
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- Опубликовано: 19 фев 2023
- What can a twenty get you at your local grocery store? What about at grocery stores across the world? Come with me on a realistic shop at my local grocer in Leipzig, Germany and see!
I'm Jessica, a Canadian living in a new country each month. Currently, I am in Leipzig, Germany. Join me as I share the raw reality of living abroad life:
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Hey Jessica 😀, your channel is brilliant. I love travelling the world 🌎 and vlogging. Wish I could leave EVERYTHING and travel as you are doing...but I haven't cracked it yet. Right now, I fit travel around work. I love your vlogs and will be ardently following them to learn and enjoy. Much love from a Zimbabwean 🇿🇼 travel vlogger in the UK 🇬🇧
Lidl is like scanning a whole trunk of a car in three minutes and afterwards constantly staring at you for taking so long to pack. Like directly telling you "if you'd pack faster it'll be more money for us"
Groceries are super inexpensive in Germany, especially in comparison to Canada. I spend a month every year there and my favourite thing to do is to go to the groceries stores and see what I can buy. Oh and yes best make sure you load your groceries quickly into your cart because the people behind get impatient. It is like being on beat the clock
I don’t know if it’s because I used to work at a grocery store in high school but it’s my favorite thing too! I love seeing all the different items and comparing pricing. It’s like my favorite part about moving to a new city.
@@jessicaexploring no take your time, our society is stressed enough...
This is so cheap compared to New Zealand. It's been already more expensive in NZ 4 years ago before the inflation. I can't wait to be back in Germany (home) for a visit ❤❤
I’m from Canada and inflation is absolutely crazy there as well. My friend bought a stick of butter for $7 the other day.
Hey Jessica, you can even save a little more if you want. Some grocery stores have their "own" brands that they have manufactured as NoName from the big brands. You can buy a Bauer yogurt for about 90 or 99 cents. Or you can buy a "Rewe Beste Wahl" = Rewe Best Joice yogurt. By the manufacturer code you can see that both yogurts come from the same factory. Only the ingredients sometimes differ a bit. For example, the cheaper version has a little more sugar and less fruit. And the cheaper yogurt costs almost half, around 55 cents. And the best thing: at our Rewe they are next to each other. So there are many more "brands" from other areas, where it runs similarly... ;-)
Thank you for the awesome tips! I always try to buy ‘no name’ when I can but it’s hard when you’re in another country. I’ll have to remember this when I’m back in Germany :)
Nice blog
Try this year... is 49% expensive
Thanks for sharing. Have you come and done the shopping at one of the grocery stores in Bangkok, Thailand yet?
Not yet! I’m thinking I may end up in Thailand in the fall so I will do it then :)
I’ve been to Wallmart in North America in comparison, Germany is cheap because they sell non branded items in the discounter shops, but honestly some of things taste like plastic cardboard, French people for example are not big fans of the German discounter shops
Non branded items are often made by the same company that makes the branded items. And it's just, that we are used to the branded items, why the original "tastes better".
In blind tests sometimes even the non branded one is preferred.
If they really would taste like "plastic cardboard", they wouldn't get bought at all. But hey, you're free to buy expensive food, if you think that enourmous advertisement budgets are improving the taste...
When I lived in Berlin I found grocery shopping excellent value for money. Later I moved to Milan, and my God do they rip off Italians. Despite wages being lower in Italy shopping is considerably more expensive.
That’s really interesting to compare. Both are big cities. I guess Milan is also known for being higher end so it makes sense that way too. Still no excuse though, we’re all just trying to live out here.
Milan it's the most expensive city in Italy, groceries included. Also with inflation in the last year prices skyrocketed especially for fruit and vegetables
Those Nutella biscuits are €2.99 tax included and at Bottega they're $8+ tax (I know location and import is different just amazed at the price difference)
I thought the same about Milka bars. They go for $5 even sometimes and they’re $1.50 here.
In Germany there`s always tax included.
That’s the awesome thing too
Bottega??? as in the High fashion brand Bottega Veneta?
@@georgiosntanis4353 haha no! It’s a local grocer in Ottawa where I used to live :)
Благодаря за видеото. В България, където минималната заплата е около 500 евро, а средната 700, цените са подобни както в Германия.
В Германия едва ли можеш да наемеш стая за 700 евро ;)
@@vapingdad1213 Имам предвид, че цените на хранителните продукти в Германия и България са близки, но заплатите при вас са няколко пъти по-високи. Не коментирам друго. Щастлива Нова година!
@@vapingdad1213Rent for my room is 300€ in a medium-sized city
Come to the uk 😅see how far £20 gets u
Not everything is closed on sundays, just shops.
It just was an adjustment because I always grew up doing errands on Sundays.
Is €100 enough for grocery per month? :)
It depends on your eating habits! We ate very cheaply and I think we spend about €150 for 2 people.
300€ a month is enough for a single person?
Honesty I think it would be! It depends on your eating habits and lifestyle but I could definitely survive on that. My fiancé and I spent about that or even less for the both of us for our entire month stay in Leipzig.
Yes. Without twist out to sugar trash and to much McD definitely enough. Probably 200€
Much cheaper than Canada
Fresher too!
This is so cheap compared to Norway😂
I can’t even imagine Norway pricing! I saw a TikTok on it and my mind was blown.