Loyalty Cards Aren’t Saving You Money- they’re Tracking Your Wallet

Major chains inflate regular prices to make loyalty discounts appear generous while harvesting shopper data

Annemarije De Boer Avatar
Annemarije De Boer Avatar

By

Image credit: Wikimedia

Key Takeaways

  • Supermarkets inflate “regular” prices to make loyalty card discounts appear generous
  • Algorithms punish loyal customers with smaller discounts based on purchasing patterns
  • Regulators investigate loyalty programs for misleading savings claims and customer manipulation

That plastic card promising exclusive savings might be the very reason your grocery bills keep climbing—and the stores know it.

The Two-Price Shell Game

Supermarkets create artificial “regular” prices to make member discounts look generous.

Walk into any major chain and you’ll spot the manipulation immediately. Items marked $6.99 for everyone else, $4.99 with your card. Feels like winning, right? Wrong. Research reveals that “regular” prices are often inflated specifically to make the member rate seem like a bargain.

Nearly one-third of loyalty-advertised discounts were at their supposed “full” price less than half the time, according to consumer investigations. You’re not getting a deal—you’re avoiding a surcharge for refusing to hand over your data.

How Stores Game Your Shopping Habits

Advanced algorithms turn your purchase history into profit-maximizing manipulation tactics.

Every swipe feeds sophisticated systems designed to squeeze more money from your wallet:

  • Personalized punishment: Buy organic regularly? You’ll get smaller discounts because algorithms predict you’ll pay full price anyway. Loyal customers get worse deals.
  • Surveillance pricing: Stores now set individual prices based on your shopping patterns—rich neighborhood, frequent shopper, predictable brand loyalty all trigger higher costs.
  • Comparison shopping elimination: Those accumulated points and “exclusive” offers lock you into one chain, preventing you from finding actual deals elsewhere.
  • Data trafficking: Your shopping habits get sold to food manufacturers, insurance companies, and marketing firms—turning your grocery runs into a revenue stream.

The strategy works effectively. Over 75% of shoppers in major markets now carry loyalty cards, and many have reduced price comparison across stores.

The Backlash Begins

Regulators and consumers are finally calling out the loyalty pricing practices.

Consumer skepticism is reaching a tipping point. A UK survey found 59% of shoppers believe loyalty discount schemes deliberately exaggerate savings. The country’s Competition and Markets Authority launched an investigation into whether these programs mislead customers or unfairly penalize vulnerable groups who can’t or won’t participate.

The grocery industry’s response? They’re expanding personalized pricing and making loyalty cards increasingly mandatory for basic discounts.

Your move: shop with cash occasionally, compare prices across stores without cards, and remember that genuine deals don’t require surrendering your privacy first. Those who lived through hard times knew how to stretch a dollar without surrendering personal data.

OUR Editorial Process

Every travel tip, dining recommendation, and review is powered by real human research. See our Code of Ethics here →



Read our Code of Ethics to see how we maintain integrity in everything we do.