After Lidl announced the ‘biggest price cut of all time’ in Germany last week, rivals Aldi Nord and Süd are launching the counterattack in a battle for price leadership that also affects other retailers.
With a remarkable video showing shoppers singing the praises of low prices at Lidl to the tones of the German national anthem, the discounter announced last Friday the biggest price cut in its history: 500 products will be permanently reduced in price, with discounts of up to 35%. The retailer even proclaimed itself Preisssieger or price winner, claiming to be 5% cheaper than Aldi Nord and Aldi Süd.
A complete surprise for the competition, and above all a frontal attack on arch-rival Aldi, which has always profiled itself as the true price leader in Germany. ‘For us, price leadership is not a short-term action, but a fundamental principle,’ says Aldi executive Felix Rottmann in Lebensmittel Zeitung. A reaction was therefore unavoidable.
Aldi is now cutting the prices of about 100 good-selling products, including fish fingers, the Tandil detergent, frozen pizza, cottage cheese, ice cream and frozen chips. Unlike Lidl, Aldi did release the full list of affected products in the process.
The price competition between Aldi and Lidl is also prompting other food retailers in Germany to act: Edeka, Rewe and even Kaufland, Lidl’s sister company, also announced price cuts for similar products in the meantime. This makes observers fear a larger-scale price war on the German market that would put further pressure on the margins of all retailers and suppliers.
-businessskeleton- on May 28th, 2025 at 10:29 UTC »
Meanwhile in Australia Coles and Woolies collude for higher prices and lower wages.
Disappointed Lidl didn't break in to the Aussie market
zebra0312 on May 28th, 2025 at 10:09 UTC »
Luckily here theyre fighting about who can increase prices the most ...
SehrGuterContent on May 28th, 2025 at 10:09 UTC »
Good for us consumers 👍🏼