Standard single mars bar cost
Standard single mars bar cost
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Discussion

Spare tyre

Original Poster:

11,424 posts

146 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
Following on from my hair cut in Poole thread https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

I thought I’d start one about mars bars

I use mars bars as a cost indicator- admittedly this was in WH Smith’s, but I think it indicates I have turn into my dad



£1.89 worlds gone mad

Mr Penguin

3,456 posts

55 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
They want you to buy the meal deal, they are 90p in Waitrose and 85p in Tesco.

mac96

5,155 posts

159 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
Mr Penguin said:
They want you to buy the meal deal, they are 90p in Waitrose and 85p in Tesco.
Alternatively they want you to buy 3 of them. So much for making them smaller and healthier!

Spare tyre

Original Poster:

11,424 posts

146 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
We have a winner at 85p

In 1997 I’d buy one on the way back from school, 30p from a corner shop

Boe inflation calculator says that’s 57p in todays money

I still have a bench mark of £30 for a decent pair of shoes (that’s what they in the year 2000 - I can’t move on!

Alickadoo

2,963 posts

39 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
Spare tyre said:
We have a winner at 85p

In 1997 I’d buy one on the way back from school, 30p from a corner shop

Boe inflation calculator says that’s 57p in todays money

I still have a bench mark of £30 for a decent pair of shoes (that’s what they in the year 2000 - I can’t move on!
I recommend ShoeZone.

https://www.shoezone.com/

The Gauge

4,975 posts

29 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
Spare tyre said:
We have a winner at 85p

In 1997 I’d buy one on the way back from school, 30p from a corner shop

Boe inflation calculator says that’s 57p in todays money
They have probably gone up even more than inflation if you consider any reduction in size of the bar.

K50 DEL

9,526 posts

244 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
I've pretty much stopped buying that size bar of chocolate, in my mind it should be 25p for 6 decent size pieces of Dairy Milk, just like it was in the 1990s when I was growing up. I can't see the value in £1 or more for a smaller bar so have voted with my feet!

DickyC

54,338 posts

214 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
7d

Same as a Lyons fruit pie (square to fit the box, no cellophane, fat soaking through the cardboard).

We knew how to live.

Lotusgone

1,487 posts

143 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
DickyC said:
7d

Same as a Lyons fruit pie (square to fit the box, no cellophane, fat soaking through the cardboard).

We knew how to live.
Especially if you poured evaporated milk into the holes in the top.



hammo19

6,466 posts

212 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
I bought 4 pairs of thermal JCB socks in Morrisons for £8 today. Bargains are still out there but you have to look…..

FiF

46,888 posts

267 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
In the mid 70s remember my boss went on a skiing holiday in Switzerland. Return to work his overriding impression of the holiday was encapsulated by "11 fking shillings for a Mars bar."

He still thought in pre decimal currency.

Pedro25

367 posts

46 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
My son informed me yesterday, London City Airport WH Smith bag of mini toblerones £19! WTAF!

Mr Pointy

12,558 posts

175 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
hammo19 said:
I bought 4 pairs of thermal JCB socks in Morrisons for £8 today. Bargains are still out there but you have to look…..
Aldi do 3 pairs for £5 which is a fair deal as well.

CanAm

11,390 posts

288 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
DickyC said:
7d

Same as a Lyons fruit pie (square to fit the box, no cellophane, fat soaking through the cardboard).

We knew how to live.
I can remember them being 4d (that's 1.66p in that new-fangled decimal money), but then I am very old.

(those Lyons individual fruit pies were excellent stuff, weren't they?)

Gary C

13,849 posts

195 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
Spare tyre said:
We have a winner at 85p

In 1997 I’d buy one on the way back from school, 30p from a corner shop

Boe inflation calculator says that’s 57p in todays money

I still have a bench mark of £30 for a decent pair of shoes (that’s what they in the year 2000 - I can’t move on!
When I used to buy one with my dinner money on the way home from school, they were only 15p

Richard-390a0

2,911 posts

107 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
85p for a single Mars Bar, people must have money to burn!!!! Makes me glad I don't have a sweet tooth ffs!

Spare tyre

Original Poster:

11,424 posts

146 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
Pedro25 said:
My son informed me yesterday, London City Airport WH Smith bag of mini toblerones £19! WTAF!
I guess they rely on confused tourists with money to spend

98elise

29,941 posts

177 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
Spare tyre said:
We have a winner at 85p

In 1997 I’d buy one on the way back from school, 30p from a corner shop

Boe inflation calculator says that’s 57p in todays money

I still have a bench mark of £30 for a decent pair of shoes (that’s what they in the year 2000 - I can’t move on!
Same here. I needed a new pair recently, and fairly average M&S shoes seems to be more like £60 these days.

DickyC

54,338 posts

214 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
CanAm said:
DickyC said:
7d

Same as a Lyons fruit pie (square to fit the box, no cellophane, fat soaking through the cardboard).

We knew how to live.
I can remember them being 4d (that's 1.66p in that new-fangled decimal money), but then I am very old.

(those Lyons individual fruit pies were excellent stuff, weren't they?)
Absolutely. What a treat! And thanks for reminding me they were Lyons Individual Fruit Pies. These details will be lost if we don't write them down.

bloomen

8,499 posts

175 months

Wednesday 29th May 2024
quotequote all
For a pure discretionary spend, you'd think they'd want to keep it at a flippant price.

When it switches from 'oh, go on, then' to 'WHAT?' that seems like poor strategy to me.

Still, good for the nation's waistline. Can't remember the last time I bought a chocolate bar out and about.

It's the shrinkflation that's more offensive than the price rise.