Store Brand vs Name Brand: The Truth About Quality

Store brands (private label) cost 20–40% less than name brands. The question: is the quality the same? For many staples, yes. For some items, people notice a difference. This guide covers when store brands are a smart swap and when you might want to stick with the name brand. Use our MealPrepBudgeter calculator to see how much switching saves.

When Store Brands Usually Match or Beat Name Brands

Basic Pantry Staples

Flour, sugar, salt, baking soda, rice, pasta, and canned beans. Store brands are often made in the same facilities as name brands. The ingredients are nearly identical. The main difference is packaging and marketing. Switching can save $50–100 per year on these alone.

Dairy

Milk, butter, eggs, and plain yogurt. Store brands meet the same standards. Many stores source from regional dairies. Taste tests often show no meaningful difference. Cheese can vary—basic cheddar and mozzarella are usually fine; fancy aged cheeses may differ.

Frozen Vegetables

Frozen peas, corn, broccoli, and mixed vegetables. Quality is typically the same. Store brands use the same or similar sources. Check the ingredient list: plain frozen veggies should have one ingredient—the vegetable. No need to pay for the name.

Oils and Vinegar

Vegetable oil, olive oil, and basic vinegar. Store brands perform the same for cooking. Extra-virgin olive oil can vary; mid-range store brands are usually fine for everyday use.

Medicines and Vitamins

Store-brand pain relievers, allergy medicine, and vitamins contain the same active ingredients. They're regulated the same way. The savings are substantial—often 50% or more.

When Store Brands Can Vary

Condiments and Sauces

Ketchup, mayo, mustard, and pasta sauce. Some people prefer name brands; others can't tell. Try the store brand once. If you like it, keep buying it. If not, the name brand may be worth the extra cost for you.

Snacks

Chips, crackers, and cookies. Store brands have improved a lot. Some are very close; others taste different. Worth a try—if you don't like it, you're out a few dollars.

Cereal

Plain cereals (corn flakes, bran flakes) are usually comparable. Fancy or kids' cereals can differ in taste and texture. Sample and decide.

When People Often Prefer Name Brands

Some items have strong brand loyalty: certain sodas, peanut butter, and specialty items. If a specific brand matters to you, keep it. Focus savings on categories where you don't care. You don't have to switch everything. Prioritize high-volume staples.

Savings by Category

CategoryTypical SavingsQuality Match?
Flour, sugar, rice25–40%Yes
Milk, eggs, butter20–35%Yes
Canned beans, tomatoes30–50%Yes
Frozen vegetables20–40%Yes
Condiments25–45%Varies

How to Decide

Try one store-brand item per shopping trip. If you like it, add more. Don't switch your whole cart at once. Combine store brands with other grocery hacks and meal planning around sales for maximum savings.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are store brands made by name brands?
Sometimes. Many store brands are produced by the same manufacturers as name brands. The product may be identical or very similar. Store brands don't advertise, so they cost less.
How much can I save with store brands?
Households that switch to store brands for staples often save 20–40% on groceries. For a $150/week budget, that's $30–60 per week, or $1,500–3,000 per year.
What if I don't like a store brand?
Stores often have satisfaction guarantees. Save the receipt and return it if you're not happy. Or donate unopened items. You lose little by trying.