Unit price tells you the cost per ounce, pound, or unit—not just the total on the package. A bigger box isn't always cheaper. Learning to read and compare unit prices can save $5–15 per trip, or hundreds per year. This guide shows you how. Use our MealPrepBudgeter calculator to track your savings.
Where to Find Unit Prices
Most grocery stores display unit price on the shelf tag below or next to the item price. It's usually in smaller text. Format varies: "$/lb," "¢/oz," or "$/unit." Some stores use price per 100g. If you don't see it, ask—many chains are required to show it. Some apps also calculate unit price from the receipt.
How Unit Price Works
Unit price = total price ÷ number of units. For a 32 oz bottle at $4.99: $4.99 ÷ 32 = about $0.16 per ounce. For a 64 oz bottle at $7.99: $7.99 ÷ 64 = about $0.12 per ounce. The 64 oz bottle is cheaper per ounce even though it costs more upfront. Always compare by unit when packages differ in size.
Common Traps
Different Units
One item may show price per pound, another per ounce. Convert to the same unit before comparing. 16 oz = 1 lb, so $/lb ÷ 16 = $/oz.
Different Package Types
Canned beans: price per can vs. price per ounce. Get both to the same denominator. A 15 oz can at $1.00 = about $0.067/oz. A 29 oz can at $1.89 = about $0.065/oz. The larger can wins.
Convenience Sizing
Single-serving and "family size" often have worse unit prices than mid-size. Stores know people grab the biggest bag assuming it's the deal. Check the shelf tag.
Unit Price Cheat Sheet
| Item Type | Typical Unit | What to Compare |
|---|---|---|
| Liquid (milk, oil) | $/gallon or $/oz | Same unit across sizes |
| Dry goods (rice, flour) | $/lb or $/oz | Same unit across sizes |
| Canned goods | $/oz or $/can | $/oz for fairness |
| Produce | $/lb | $/lb for loose vs bagged |
When Unit Price Isn't Enough
Unit price doesn't account for waste. A giant bag of lettuce may be cheaper per ounce but spoil before you use it. Buy only what you'll use. See reduce food waste. Also, store brands often beat name brands on unit price—see store brand vs name brand.
Build a Price List
Note the best unit price you've seen for staples. When the ad hits that price, stock up. A simple spreadsheet or phone note works. Over time you'll know a "buy" price for rice, pasta, canned tomatoes, and more.