Online shopping: which supermarket really delivers?
All the major stores now offer home delivery, but price,
availability and range differ hugely. We weigh all the options
This
debate is not about ‘punishing’ online retailers for their success but a
cash-strapped government’s self-interested need for income. Photograph: Justin
Kase ztwoz / Alamy/Alamy
Saturday
2 May 201502.00 EDTLast modified on Saturday 2 May
Screaming toddlers, long
queues and heavy shopping bags – just a few of the reasons to avoid setting
foot in a supermarket aisle and do the weekly shop online. But with Asda,
Waitrose, Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Ocado and Morrisons vying for our custom, canny
shoppers can take advantage of the competition and shave pounds off delivery
costs – and even demand free delivery in return for loyalty. Our survey of the
services used by millions of families, however, also revealed a postcode
lottery, with households in rural areas often being unable to place an order.
The worst way to play the delivery game is to book a weekend
slot with the same supermarket every week, but fail to buy an annual pass. This
alone could cost you £312 a year. But a shopper who, for example, ditches their
weekly delivery from Asda and instead rotates between Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Ocado
and Waitrose and Asda itself could knock £80 off £340 of groceries a month.
This isn’t as much hassle as you might think because the mySupermarket website
allows you to switch your basket between accounts at different supermarkets, so
you can reorder from Tesco what you last bought from Sainsbury’s.
Booking
a weekend slot with the same supermarket every week, but not buying an annual
pass, could cost you £300 a year
Even if you already have an annual deal there are still savings
to be made. You may find that your supermarket is prepared to match the rate
offered to new customers if you ask. We tried this with Ocado, saying we were
considering moving to a rival, and were offered a free midweek delivery pass,
which normally costs up to £60, for a year.
There are some other useful tips too:
• Book Saturday and Sunday morning deliveries as far in advance as
you can.This may bring down the price, and you can usually edit your
order on the night before, or even the day of, the delivery.
• If you are planning a quiet night in at the weekend or are
spending a day at home during the week, take
advantage of cheap slots (usually just £1) by
ordering a delivery to arrive then.
• Don’t put up with shoddy substitutions and
short best-before dates. Complain and get a refund.
• Asda, Sainsbury’s, Ocado and Tesco all offer “delivery passes”,
charging between £60 and £110 annually.
Sainsbury’s
Delivery charges Spend
£40 or more and you’ll pay between £1 and £6 for delivery. Orders under £40 are
charged at £6.95, but a minimum spend of £25 still applies. Free delivery after
2pm Monday to Thursday on orders over £100.
Availability By paying £6 at 9.30pm on
Friday night, we found we could get our groceries delivered by 10am the next
day to a range of locations around the country. To get a £1 slot outside normal
working hours (9am to 6pm), however, meant waiting at least two-and-a-half days
for delivery. Also, Sainsbury’s wouldn’t deliver to the rural/more remote
locations we tested in Wales and Scotland, which included an area to the east
of Fishguard in Pembrokeshire, and Ullapool in the Highlands.
Annual pass £60 for unlimited free
deliveries seven days a week. Or £30 for free deliveries on Tuesdays to
Thursdays, if you spend at least £40 per order.
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Current deal for new customers £25 off your first shop (minimum spend £100), plus £10 off four
subsequent shops.
Customer service Sainsbury’s
came second from bottom in the 2015 Which? supermarket survey, with shoppers
complaining that it regularly substitutes missing items with more expensive
ones (you can choose not to accept any substitutions and get a refund instead).
It’s worth noting that… A
“green van” option is being rolled out, so you will be able to select a van
that is already making deliveries in your area and “help the environment”. The
supermarket also offers a “freshness promise”, so if you’re not happy with the
quality of any fresh produce you can get a refund.
Tesco
Delivery charges Spend
£25 and you’ll pay between £1 and £6 for delivery. You can also check out a
basket that costs less than £25 if you pay a £4 fee (on top of delivery costs).
Availability We found that on a Monday
morning we could book a slot for delivery the same evening to a south London
address for just £2. We could also get next-day delivery outside working hours
for £1 to suburbs in Leeds and Manchester and rural hamlets in Scotland and on
the Welsh border.
For delivery to a few locations around the country – such as
Greenwich in south-east London and Castle Douglas in southern Scotland – we
were even offered free delivery slots on Monday to Thursday … provided we were
prepared to wait in for four hours.
Annual pass £60 for
unlimited deliveries seven days a week for a year, or £30 for unlimited
deliveries on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays for a year, with a minimum
spend of £25. The pass also gives priority access to Christmas delivery slots
and “exclusive offers and discounts”. If you buy a delivery pass and it ends up
costing you more than you would have spent on delivery charges, Tesco promises
it will give you a grocery “eCoupon” for the difference.
Current deal for new customers £15 off your first online grocery shop using
the code XXC64P (minimum spend £60).
Customer service Tesco
won Online Supermarket of the Year at the Grocer Gold Awards last year, but
came joint fourth with Morrisons in the Which? survey scoring 66%. Customers
praised its punctuality but gave the quality of the fresh food three out of
five.
It’s worth noting that… You can
collect “green” Clubcard points if you opt to have your delivery without
carrier bags.
Ocado
Delivery charges Free on
Wednesdays on orders in excess of £75. Otherwise, the minimum spend is £40 and
charges range from free to £5.99. Peak slots – Fridays, Saturday mornings and
weekday evenings – cost most. Your first two orders are delivered free, and the
next four discounted, so you can try the service.
Availability For most of the addresses
we tested, a delivery could be booked for the next day. However, Ocado would
not deliver to any of the sample rural addresses in England, Wales and Scotland
that we tested.
Annual pass £110 for unlimited
deliveries seven days a week for a year, or £60 for Tuesdays, Wednesdays and
Thursdays for a year. There’s a minimum spend of £40 to qualify. Some customers
are offered a free three-month trial of the annual pass, or asked to pay £69.96
a year for the anytime pass and £27.48 a year for the midweek pass. Existing
customers should ring and ask for their own free “trial” – even if they have
been using the service for many years.
Current deal for new customers Get £20 off an £80 shop, plus a free midweek
delivery pass for a year, with code VOU9318789.
Customer service Ocado
came top of the Which? online supermarkets table for the fifth year in a row
this year. Shoppers said there were fewer substitutions than other supermarkets
and the best-before dates were as good as the ones they would have chosen.
It’s worth noting that … Drivers
will take your groceries into your kitchen, and you can choose a “green van”
that is already delivering to your area.
Waitrose
Delivery charges The
vast majority of deliveries are free, but the minimum spend is higher than its
rivals at £60. Some branches charge between £2 and £5 for slots at the busiest
times.
Availability Be prepared to wait a
couple of days for delivery – we tested a wide range of postcodes on different
days at different times and were never offered same-day or next-day delivery.
It also wouldn’t deliver to the rural/remote addresses we tested in
Pembrokeshire, north Devon (an area a few miles from Barnstaple), and Ullapool.
Annual pass No, but
most deliveries are free.
Current deal for new customers You get £65 off your
first five online grocery shops (£15 off your first, £20 off your second, and
£10 off your third, fourth and fifth shops).
Customer service It was
the only supermarket to be given five stars for its online delivery service in
the Which? supermarket survey.
It’s worth noting that… You can
provide instructions for your order and delivery. “Customers can specify, for
example, if they would like their bananas slightly green/slightly yellow, or
their ham thickly sliced,” a spokesperson said.
Morrisons
Delivery charges £5 on
Saturday and Sunday mornings until 1pm. After 7pm, £1 charge applies to weekend
deliveries. On weekdays, deliveries are also priced at £1 between 6am and
8.30am and between 9pm and 11.30pm. At all other times they are £3. Minimum
spend £40.
Availability We found plenty of
next-day slots for £3 from different locations, but sometimes had to wait an
extra day for a £1 slot. Morrisons accepted deliveries to fewer postcodes than
the other supermarkets – those in Cambridge and south London were outside its
area, as well as all of the rural addresses we tested.
Current deal for new customers Wasn’t
being advertised via Morrisons itself, but cashback website Quidco is offering
£10 off a £70 spend, plus £7.50 cashback.
Customer service It
consistently got three out of five stars in every measure of the Which?
supermarket survey, with respondents complaining that it has a more limited
range of online products than most rivals. However, it was also praised for
choosing fresh food with lengthy best-before dates.
It’s worth noting that… Morrisons
claims a 96% success rate for delivering on time. The driver will bring the
order inside, and there’s a “doorstep check”: if you are unhappy with the
freshness of produce you get them free, and free with your next shop, too. It
also has“green” delivery slots.
Asda
Delivery charges From £1
(we found they were available mid-week after 7pm, and during typical working
hours after noon) to £6 (for Saturday and Sunday morning slots). Minimum spend
of either £25 or £40
Availability Next-day slots are
generally available to book 24 hours in advance, and Asda delivered to all the
postcodes we tested, including remote/rural areas.
Annual pass £60 for unlimited
deliveries, seven days a week for a year, or £24 for Tuesdays to Thursdays for
a year– with a minimum spend of £40.
Current deal for new customers Not
advertised on Asda, but cashback website Quidco is offering £8 cashback on a
£50 spend.
Customer service Asda
was the lowest-rated online supermarket in the Which? survey. It scored worst
for substitutions, with 51% of customers complaining that their orders
contained such an item. It’s worth noting that… You can
refuse any substitutions, or hand them back for a full refund. You can also
request a refund online within four days.
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