Yong Jae Lee
December 8, 2025 Β· 10 min read
Written and reviewed by Yong Jae Lee Β· Content follows Australian Dietary Guidelines
We compared the price of a full week's worth of lunchbox ingredients at both major Australian supermarkets. The results might surprise you.
The Great Supermarket Showdown
Woolworths and Coles together account for around 65% of Australia's grocery market. We priced a standard week of lunchbox ingredients at both stores (March 2026 prices, Sydney metro).
The Comparison Basket
| Item | Woolworths | Coles |
|---|---|---|
| Sliced bread (loaf) | $3.50 | $3.00 |
| Sliced chicken breast (200g) | $6.00 | $5.50 |
| Canned tuna (4-pack) | $6.00 | $5.50 |
| Eggs (12-pack) | $5.50 | $5.00 |
| Carrot (1kg) | $1.50 | $1.30 |
| Cherry tomatoes (250g) | $3.50 | $3.00 |
| Cheese block (500g) | $7.00 | $6.50 |
| Apple (1kg) | $3.50 | $3.00 |
| Rice crackers (pack) | $2.80 | $2.50 |
| Hummus (200g) | $3.50 | $3.00 |
| Total | $42.80 | $38.30 |
Winner: Coles β $4.50 cheaper per week = ~$160/year saved
Where Each Store Wins
Woolworths wins on:
Coles wins on:
Category-by-Category Detailed Comparison
Bread and Bakery
| Item | Woolworths | Coles | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| White bread loaf (700g) | $2.40 | $2.40 | Tie |
| Wholemeal bread loaf (700g) | $3.50 | $3.40 | Coles by $0.10 |
| Wraps 8-pack (white) | $2.80 | $3.00 | Woolworths by $0.20 |
| Mini pita bread 8-pack | $3.20 | $3.50 | Woolworths by $0.30 |
| Crumpets 6-pack | $3.00 | $2.80 | Coles by $0.20 |
| English muffins 6-pack | $3.50 | $3.60 | Woolworths by $0.10 |
Woolworths wins on wraps, pita, and English muffins. Coles takes wholemeal bread and crumpets. If your child has wraps most days, Woolworths saves you about a dollar per month on that single item alone.
Fruit
| Item | Woolworths | Coles | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bananas (1kg) | $3.50 | $3.90 | Woolworths by $0.40 |
| Apples, Royal Gala (1kg) | $4.50 | $4.50 | Tie |
| Mandarins (1kg) | $4.00 | $4.50 | Woolworths by $0.50 |
| Grapes, green seedless (500g) | $5.00 | $4.80 | Coles by $0.20 |
| Strawberries punnet (250g) | $3.50 | $3.50 | Tie |
| Watermelon (per kg, whole) | $1.50 | $1.50 | Tie |
Woolworths generally offers better prices on bananas and mandarins β two of the most popular school lunchbox fruits in Australia. Coles tends to be marginally cheaper on grapes and stone fruit.
Snacks
| Item | Woolworths | Coles | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rice crackers (100g) | $2.20 | $2.50 | Woolworths by $0.30 |
| Muesli bars 6-pack (homebrand) | $3.50 | $3.80 | Woolworths by $0.30 |
| Popcorn multi-pack (6 bags) | $3.00 | $2.80 | Coles by $0.20 |
| Sultanas (500g) | $4.00 | $3.80 | Coles by $0.20 |
| Fruit straps (8-pack) | $3.50 | $3.50 | Tie |
Woolworths wins on crackers and muesli bars, while Coles edges ahead on popcorn and dried fruit. The difference per item is small, but if you buy five to six snack products weekly, these margins accumulate.
Dairy
| Item | Woolworths | Coles | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cheese block, tasty (500g) | $6.50 | $6.50 | Tie |
| Greek yoghurt tub (1kg) | $5.50 | $5.00 | Coles by $0.50 |
| Cheese slices 12-pack | $3.80 | $3.60 | Coles by $0.20 |
| Cream cheese tub (250g) | $3.50 | $3.50 | Tie |
| Babybel mini cheese (6-pack) | $6.00 | $5.80 | Coles by $0.20 |
Coles consistently edges ahead on dairy. If your child eats yoghurt five days a week, the $0.50 saving on a 1kg tub translates to roughly $2 per month.
Protein
| Item | Woolworths | Coles | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shaved ham (200g) | $4.00 | $3.80 | Coles by $0.20 |
| Tinned tuna 4-pack (95g each) | $5.80 | $6.00 | Woolworths by $0.20 |
| Free-range eggs (12-pack) | $5.50 | $5.80 | Woolworths by $0.30 |
| Chicken breast (per kg) | $10.00 | $10.00 | Tie |
| Peanut butter (375g) | $3.00 | $2.80 | Coles by $0.20 |
| Hummus tub (200g) | $3.00 | $3.50 | Woolworths by $0.50 |
The protein category is a genuine split. Woolworths wins on eggs, tuna, and hummus; Coles wins on ham and peanut butter. Buying protein from both stores based on price gives the best result.
Weekly, Monthly, and Annual Budget Simulation
One Child
| Shopping Strategy | Weekly | Monthly (4 wks) | Annual (40 school wks) |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Woolworths | $22.50 | $90.00 | $900.00 |
| All Coles | $21.00 | $84.00 | $840.00 |
| Cherry-pick both stores | $19.50 | $78.00 | $780.00 |
| Cherry-pick both + specials | $16.00 | $64.00 | $640.00 |
Two Children
| Shopping Strategy | Weekly | Monthly (4 wks) | Annual (40 school wks) |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Woolworths | $38.00 | $152.00 | $1,520.00 |
| All Coles | $35.50 | $142.00 | $1,420.00 |
| Cherry-pick both stores | $33.00 | $132.00 | $1,320.00 |
| Cherry-pick both + specials | $27.00 | $108.00 | $1,080.00 |
The numbers are clear: families with two children who shop strategically across both stores and take advantage of weekly half-price specials can save over $400 per year compared to shopping at a single store without a plan.
The ALDI Alternative
No lunchbox budget comparison is complete without mentioning ALDI, Australia's third-largest supermarket chain. ALDI operates a fundamentally different model β a smaller range of predominantly own-brand products, no loyalty programs, and consistently lower base prices.
Why ALDI Is 10-20% Cheaper
ALDI keeps costs low through several strategies that the big two cannot easily replicate:
ALDI Lunchbox Staple Prices (March 2026)
| Item | ALDI Price | Woolworths | Coles |
|---|---|---|---|
| White bread loaf | $1.89 | $2.40 | $2.40 |
| Cheese block (500g) | $5.49 | $6.50 | $6.50 |
| Greek yoghurt (1kg) | $4.49 | $5.50 | $5.00 |
| Rice crackers (100g) | $1.79 | $2.20 | $2.50 |
| Free-range eggs (12) | $4.99 | $5.50 | $5.80 |
For families near an ALDI store, buying staples there and topping up fresh produce at Woolworths or Coles is the most cost-effective approach. A family of two children could save an additional $150-200 per year by making ALDI their primary lunchbox shop.
Seasonal Price Variation Tips
Fruit and vegetable prices fluctuate dramatically with the seasons. Understanding these cycles helps you avoid overpaying:
Summer (December to February)
Autumn (March to May)
Winter (June to August)
Spring (September to November)
By building your lunchbox fruit around whatever is cheapest that week, you can reduce your fresh produce spend by 20-30% without any loss of quality or variety.
Smart Budget Hacks
1. Master the Own-Brand Swap
Woolworths Essentials and Coles Homebrand products are manufactured in the same factories as many name-brand equivalents. For staples like bread, cheese, crackers, pasta, and tinned goods, the quality difference is negligible. Committing to own-brand for your top ten lunchbox staples saves $5-8 per week.
2. Buy in Bulk When Half-Price
Both Woolworths and Coles rotate their half-price specials on a roughly six-week cycle. When cheese blocks, tinned tuna, or muesli bars hit half price, buy four to six weeks' worth. Non-perishable items store easily; cheese and bread freeze well.
3. Freeze Everything You Can
Bread, cheese, yoghurt pouches, cooked muffins, scrolls, and bliss balls all freeze beautifully. A chest freezer (available second-hand from $100-150 on Facebook Marketplace) pays for itself within a few months through bulk-buy savings.
4. Use Leftovers Strategically
Cook an extra 30% at dinner specifically for tomorrow's lunchbox. Roast chicken becomes chicken sandwiches, spaghetti bolognese becomes pasta salad, fried rice becomes a thermos lunch. This approach costs virtually nothing extra and eliminates morning prep time.
5. Join Loyalty Programs
Woolworths Everyday Rewards and Coles Flybuys are free to join and provide genuine savings:
6. Download Both Apps
The Woolworths and Coles apps show weekly specials, allow you to build shopping lists, and offer digital coupon savings. Spending five minutes on Wednesday evening (when new catalogues drop) comparing both apps can save $5-10 on that week's lunchbox shop.
Smart Shopping Tips
1. Buy own-brand for staples: Near-identical quality at significant savings.
2. Use weekly catalogues: Both stores' apps show weekly specials.
3. Buy seasonal produce: Don't buy mangoes in July.
4. Freeze bread: Buy multiple loaves when on special and freeze.
5. Click & Collect: Compare prices easily and avoid impulse buys.
The Verdict
For pure price savings, Coles edges ahead on lunchbox staples. But the biggest savings come from buying own-brand products, shopping seasonally, and avoiding pre-packaged snacks.
The smartest families in Australia do not commit to a single supermarket. They cherry-pick the best prices from Woolworths, Coles, and ALDI, stock up during half-price cycles, and build their lunchboxes around whatever seasonal produce is cheapest that week. This approach can reduce your annual lunchbox spend by $400 or more per child β money that is better spent on school uniforms, excursions, and family experiences.
Let Us Handle the Planning
References & Sources
About this article
This article was written and reviewed by Yong Jae Lee, a Senior Product Designer based in Australia. Aussie Lunchbox is a solo project β every article is researched, tested at home with my own kids, and aligned with Australian Dietary Guidelines. If you spot an error or have a suggestion, please contact us.