How To Complete Your Grocery Shopping In 34 Minutes

How To Complete Your Grocery Shopping In 34 Minutes
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Most of us spend more than an hour grocery shopping. Here's how to cut that time in half.

By Lynn Andriani

Stop Writing a Shopping List the Way You Always Have

You already know not to set foot in the store without a written plan of everything you need. But if your crib sheet reads something like, "milk/chicken/broccoli/pasta/yogurt/avocado," you're going to be spending extra time darting from aisle to aisle and back again. Taking 60 seconds before you leave home to rewrite your list so that it's sorted by section is one of the easiest ways to streamline your shopping -- and to get in and out minutes faster. Or, use one of the many grocery-list apps, such as Pepperplate or Paprika, which do the sorting for you—and have other helpful features, including one that removes an item from the list as soon as you tap on it, so by the time you're finished shopping, the list is clear.

DVR Your Favorite Thursday Night Show

Erin Gifford, who is a spokesperson for ZipList, a grocery-list and recipe tool, food shops for her seven-person household every week in just 35 minutes. She pretty much has her weekly routine down to a science -- she goes to the same store at 8:30 a.m. on Thursdays, when she knows it'll just be her and the people who restock the shelves (bonus: later in the week is also when you'll find the best deals). If weekday mornings aren't an option for you, try weeknights, after dinner—that's when Jess Dang, who founded the meal-planning service Cook Smarts, shops. And one more reason to avoid weekends: A Time Use Institute study found that people spend seven minutes longer in grocery stores on Saturdays and Sundays than they do on weekdays.

The Checkout Line to Skip If You're Buying Lollipop Kale Sprouts

Although the majority of shoppers believe self-checkout systems are faster than lanes with human cashiers, according to one survey, that may not actually be true, especially if your cart includes produce, which may or may not be tagged with a sticker code (cashiers tend to memorize the code for, say, gala apples, while computers definitely don't). If the lines are equal, you're probably better off opting for a person. Another thing to remember: The express lane isn't always the quickest.

Ask for a Favor at the Deli Counter

The deli counter can be one of the biggest time sucks in the store. Instead of watching the store employee slice your ham, turkey and provolone cheese to the perfect thickness, Dang says you could shave minutes off your shopping by asking if you can drop off your order and return for it in five minutes -- during which time you can hit up the meat section or cereal aisle, then swing back just before you're ready to check out.

Before You Go

The Biggest Mistakes We Make When Grocery Shopping
Trying To Avoid Crowds(01 of06)
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Anyone who's spent time catching up on their celebrity-gossip magazine reading while slowly making their way toward the register knows that Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays are the busiest days to shop. But while switching your weekly grocery run to a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday may save you a little bit of time, it probably won't save you money. Retailers know that most people shop on weekends, so that's when they offer their best deals, says Roger Davidson, who has held senior positions with major grocery chains such as Supervalu, Wild Oats Markets and Walmart. Stores often start their sales on a Thursday and run them through a Sunday, which is the busiest day. Another reason to head to the store on days when it's crowded: Research shows we're less likely to buy unnecessary items when we're surrounded by many people. If you really love having wide-open aisles but still want to benefit from markdowns, try Thursday or Friday mornings. (credit:Thinkstock)
Not Realizing They're Low On Detergent(02 of06)
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When Kasey Trenum, a money expert at Savings.com and cofounder of the online, money-saving course Time2SaveWorkshops.com, first started trying to cut her household spending, she looked at where most of her money was going -- and it turned out that items she bought every few weeks, like detergent and diapers, were her biggest expenses. So Trenum began looking for coupons and buying those products when they were on sale or she had a coupon (or both) -- not just when she was running low. She's been doing this for years, and just a few weeks ago used coupons to score six bottles of detergent, four containers of fabric softener and two packages of dryer sheets for less than $8 total. (credit:Thinkstock)
Avoiding Products Shelved At Eye Level(03 of06)
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We've been trained to look high and low (literally) for the best deals, but sometimes the least expensive items are right in front of us, says Davidson. Do a quick scan up and down before you put that can of green beans in your basket, he advises, since many retailers are starting to place items with value prices at eye level -- especially cheaper store brands (which, Davidson reminds us, are usually the same quality as national brands, since many of the companies that make them also make store brands). (credit:Thinkstock)
Enlisting Their Partners To Help(04 of06)
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We knew shopping with kids isn't recommended if you want to spend less ("But Mom, I neeeeed these cocoa-fruity-yogurt-cereal-cupcake bars!"), but we didn't realize that bringing a man along also meant we'd likely wind up with a bunch of things we didn't set out to buy. Davidson has done research that has shown men are less strategic when shopping and tend to throw more impulse buys into their baskets. (Additionally, this eye-opening article reveals that 60 percent of purchases are unplanned -- regardless of the shopper's gender.) If you do have to bring your kids, give them a job -- Saving.com's Trenum lets them push the shopping cart -- to distract them. (credit:Thinkstock)
Going To Dollar Stores Just For Extras(05 of06)
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Trinkets and small gifts (e.g., floral nail files, colorful pens, 20-packs of hair elastics) aren't the only things worth buying at dollar stores. These retailers can be gold mines for canned and bottled foods -- think pickles, olives, salsa. And while we're on the subject of non-traditional places to buy groceries, avoid stocking up on food at drugstores, says Davidson. They tend to price everything from chips to pasta higher than supermarkets do. (credit:Thinkstock)
Falling For Half-Aisles(06 of06)
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Experts who lay out grocery stores know that a long aisle with no escape route can be off-putting (Davidson says a lot of people will look down it and think, "I don't need anything there," -- even though they very well might). So designers are starting to put cross aisles in (they're like cross streets, running perpendicular to main aisles), since their research shows there's a greater likelihood a shopper will be drawn to them, thinking there's an easy way out if she doesn't find what she's looking for. That isn't to say short aisles have expensive items and long aisles have cheaper ones -- but it is a reminder that we can easily get seduced into making an impulse buy in a short aisle, so remember to stick to the script. Get what's on your list, and don't pay attention to an aisle's length.Next: 8 pricey foods to stop buying (and what to buy instead) (credit:Thinkstock)