Combined Lidl, Aldi market share nears leader Supervalu

More than 22% of grocery shoppers spend at the German discounters, figures show

The combined share of German discounters, Lidl and Aldi, of the Republic’s grocery spend is now within touching distance of market leader Supervalu, which has a share of 23 per cent. File photograph: Getty Images
The combined share of German discounters, Lidl and Aldi, of the Republic’s grocery spend is now within touching distance of market leader Supervalu, which has a share of 23 per cent. File photograph: Getty Images

Almost one in four Irish consumers now do their shopping in either Aldi or Lidl, according to figures to be published today.

The new figures from retail analysts Kantar Worldpanel, seen by The Irish Times, show that in the 12 weeks up to April 24th, Lidl commanded an 11.2 per cent share of the Republic's grocery market, while Aldi had a share of 10.9 per cent, taking their combined total over a three-month period to 22.1 per cent.

Based on these figures, the German discounters' share of the Republic's grocery spend is now within touching distance of market leader Supervalu, which has a share of 23 per cent.

Their combined reach puts them virtually on a par with Tesco, which saw 22.2 per cent of Irish grocery shoppers come through its doors over the last three months, and sees them leapfrog Dunnes Stores, currently on 21.5 per cent.

READ SOME MORE

Sample shoppers

By comparison, Kantar figures issued last month, compiled using old methods and based on a significantly smaller number of sample shoppers, gave Supervalu 24.9 per cent of the market, with Tesco in second on 23.9 per cent, 0.4 per cent ahead of Dunnes Stores in third. Those figures put Lidl and Aldi at 8.5 per cent and 8.4 per cent market share respectively, a total of 16.9 per cent.

The phenomenal success of the German discounters in recent years can better be seen by comparing their new figures with those of six years ago. In 2010, Aldi had a total market share of just 3.2 per cent, while Lidl had a share of 5.6 per cent.

While the new figures indicate a dramatic shift in market share since the last Kantar figures were published four weeks ago, they do not reflect any change in spending habits over the period. Kantar Worldpanel said the changes are explained by a significant recalibration of how it collects its data.

It uses a panel of shoppers to assess market share and said that it had now widened its panel to 5,000 shoppers - an increase of 70 per cent - in order to paint a more accurate picture of the Irish grocery market.

Conor Pope

Conor Pope

Conor Pope is Consumer Affairs Correspondent, Pricewatch Editor