Unfortunately, this deal has expired 25 December 2023.
2788°
Refreshed 4 months ago

ALDI Christmas Price Lock - Christmas Vegetables 19p / 2KG White Potatoes 15p / Fresh Turkey will be from £3.75 per KG and more

In store: National ·
Shared by
Dan_82 Deal editor
Joined in 2006
24,842
24,441

About this deal

This deal is expired. Here are some options that might interest you:

More Vegetables deals

Find more like this

See all deals

Discover more deals on our homepage

Update 1
Now live - Included within the savvy deal is a selection of Aldi’s fresh and delicious vegetables all sourced from British suppliers, including White Potatoes (15p, 2kg),Carrots (19p, 1kg), Parsnips (19p, 500g), Red and White Cabbages (19p each), Brussels Sprouts (19p, 500g), and Swede (19p each).



We also featured it on our latest podcast - You can find it on various podcast platforms, called 'False Economy' here
Prices locked from 2022, so keep those dates at hand and save some £££'s

Offers incoming, some are live already:

  • New research from Aldi* has found 40% of Brits plan to ‘spend less on Christmas food’ compared to last year, because of the cost-of-living crisis
  • With 35% saying they plan to scale back on Christmas celebrations in general
  • In response, Aldi has today announced a ‘Christmas Price Lock’, with dinner staples including Christmas pudding and pigs in blankets locked at 2022 prices
  • This means a family of four can eat for under £15 – the cheapest of all major supermarkets
  • Aldi are also committing even further by going lower on fresh whole turkey prices compared to last year

Products which form the Aldi Price Lock are available across the following dates this festive period:

  • Turkey available from 19th December
  • Holly Lane Christmas Pudding 400g available in stores now
  • Butcher’s Select Pigs in Blankets available from 24th November
  • Super Six Festive Vegetables available from 18th December

Also ALDI Christmas - Includes Pigs in Blanket Pizza £4.49 / Premium Cocktails £9.99 / Giant Yorkshire pudding pig in blanket £4.99 + More


With Christmas officially two-months away, new research* from Aldi has revealed more than 1 in 3 (35%) Brits are worried about the cost of Christmas, and are planning to scale back celebrations this year due to rising costs. The supermarket has found that 40% of Brits are planning to spend less on Christmas food compared to last year, while nearly 1 in 5 are planning to invite fewer people to the Christmas meal, with aunties and uncles topping the list of those most likely to be uninvited (15%), closely followed by mothers-in-law (12%) and fathers-in-law (11%). The selfless among us (16%) said they were even considering uninviting themselves from Christmas, to save costs for friends and family.

In response to this and to ensure as many people as possible can celebrate Christmas to the fullest this year, Aldi has announced a ‘Christmas Price Lock’, which will see prices of key food staples including a range of whole turkey crowns, pigs in blankets, Christmas puddings, and festive vegetables remain the same as they were in 2022. The Aldi Price Lock, which will be available in stores nationwide, could see a family of four enjoying their Christmas meal for less than £15**. What’s more, three of Aldi’s fresh turkey lines will be even cheaper than 2022 at just £3.75 per kg this Christmas.

The Price Lock comes as 2 in 5 Brits admitted they were planning on curbing the amount they spend on the Christmas meal due to rising food costs, with roast potatoes, pigs in blankets, and even the turkey all in the running to be cut back or removed from this year’s spread, despite being among the most popular elements of the meal.

Aldi has announced the Price Lock ahead of November, when over a quarter of Brits (26%) start buying food for the Christmas day meal. However almost 1 in 5 (17%) of those surveyed admit they’re spreading the cost of the big day, starting to stock up on items in the sales, with chocolate, wine, and Christmas pudding topping the list of items already stashed away.

Richard Thornton, Communications Director at Aldi UK commented:“At Aldi we believe that everyone should get to enjoy an amazing Christmas, which is why we’re introducing the Aldi Christmas Price Lock. Our research shows cost is a major factor when it comes to choosing food options and by locking the prices of key staples at the level they were in 2022, it will help our customers up and down the country enjoy the Christmas dinner they deserve with the ones they love.”

Thanks to Aldi’s Christmas Price Lock, Brits can now enjoy the Christmas dinner they deserve, for the same price as last year, with the nation’s favourite Christmas dinner items, turkey and pigs in blankets making the list. This comes in just as Aldi has been named the cheapest supermarket for the 16th consecutive month, by Consumer group Which?.

Now that Aldi shoppers can invite the same amount of people as last year, who would be the dream person at the table? The research found Sir David Attenborough voted as the most desired person to share a meal with (25%), followed by Stephen Fry (16%) and David Beckham (12%). What’s more, 6% said they’d invite Tyson Fury, beating Kim Kardashian and Britney Spears.
Aldi More details at

Community Updates
Edited by Dan_82, 18 December 2023
New Comment

137 Comments

sorted by
's avatar
  1. MinerWilly's avatar
    Good old Aldi. Picked up a woman in my taxi today from Tesco, 5 carrier bags in back £160 (edited)
    eset12345's avatar
    Without knowing what she bough those 5 bags could've cost £160 or more in aldi too
  2. Harryg21's avatar
    Credit to Aldi!
    Yes I know it’s about making a profit but for those families who need to budget even at Christmas this information is a god send!
  3. Angri's avatar
    What a different and ambitious marketing ploy!

    It aims to sow an acceptance in (new) customers psyche that Aldi will be THE place to do their Christmas food shopping, and it is giving them 6 weeks to ferment that message.

    The downside is that it provides the benchmark for every other major food retailer to pitch their own marketing campaign to combat it.

    As we've seen over the last few years, all the big chains belt out their tertiary range of seasonal vegetables at a similar price anyway, and the price of turkeys was due to decrease this year (as last year there were some shortages owing to bird flu, of course)
  4. TristanDeCoonha's avatar
    Time to make space in the freezer
    Icarus2015's avatar
    Oh yeah. The best time of the year to buy cheap veg and freeze it. Just wash and blanch them. Let them cool and bag them up into freezer bags. Lasts months. I make up 2 portion bags of a veg medley of chopped sprouts, carrots, peas, parsnips, with small chopped potatoes, whatever you like. I fill up my freezer every year. For £10 you can do a load frozen veg to last over 6 months. Go for it, you won't regret it.
  5. blahblahblah1234's avatar
    Aldi has the best deals for Christmas dinner from around 2pm on Christmas Eve.
    Most of their luxury ranges are reduced to 50% or 75% off.
    We don't bother looked before then, always end up a huge spread and a freezer full of good quality bargains.
    markoUK's avatar
    Nobody in their right mind though wants to be out hunting for marked down goods on Xmas Eve. (edited)
  6. Wammer's avatar
    Crikey! That's been announced a bit early. Let the price wars begin.
    Dan_82's avatar
    Author
    51318879-ic9Sv.jpg
  7. anaxom's avatar
    So when these 19p vegs and 15p potatoes will be available at those prices in aldi? (edited)
    Sweetcorn12's avatar
    December
  8. beaversrus's avatar
    PUBLISHED: 12:51, 18 January 2023
    51325584-w7u6E.jpg (edited)
  9. TristanDeCoonha's avatar
    While we get upset over our prices, it can be worse in Europe. In Hungary you can currently pay around £3 for a head of broccoli, which can be an hour's wage. Bell peppers £1.80 per kg, with many other disproportionately high prices. This is from a country that is probably 40% agricultural.
    The supermarkets rarely offer the reduced "yellow label" stickers. If it is in date then it's full price
    Laurence_Saunders's avatar
    Yeah, food has always been cheap in the UK. Even with recent inflation, British supermarkets are still cheap compared to global standards (although that does often come at the expense of quality).

    The fundamental issue is that many people are forced to spend a huge portion of their income on housing, so have very little left to spend on things like food.

    If our economy was better balanced we'd all spend less on rent/mortgages, and more on food, which would mean farmers get a fairer deal and we'd be healthier too.
  10. pet2000's avatar
    A German supermarket dictating British Post-Brexit prices. Where will it all end? LOL! Heat. (edited)
    jimbo23's avatar
    It's nothing to do with Brexit, look at the prices in EU countries... It's more or less the same.

    My friend just got back from Spain, 4euros for a chocolate bar.

    and Germany is in recession... (edited)
  11. Newbold's avatar
    Aldi (and Lidl) have shown up the fat profits that have been made for years by the major UK supermarkets. Tesco claims to match certain Aldi prices, but rarely actually does because the Tesco product is usually inferior.

    Having recently ditched Tesco fruit and veg for a local farm shop we’ve now discovered what utter rubbish Tesco sell by comparison, at high prices too. 
    beaversrus's avatar
    How much you paying for carrots
  12. Jamij's avatar
    So when will the offer start?
    BruceyBonus's avatar
    The dates are written in the description of the deal.
  13. deleted231063's avatar
    Thank you Aldi...the Germans swooping I to help us poor Brits in our darkest hour (because we can't afford to put the lights on!).
    jimbo23's avatar
    Err.. Germany is in recession, so I doubt it - They have problems of their own.
  14. CharlieBrown's avatar
    Is Christmas on the 25th of December again? Just checking...... with inflation should it not be on the 28th......
    beaversrus's avatar
    No. It should be cancelled.

    The state of the world (edited)
  15. katw's avatar
    What’s best way to store them
    fabsaver's avatar
    For the veg remove from the plastic packaging and store in the fridge crisper drawer. Every couple of weeks dry any water that has collected in the bottom of the drawer.

    For potatoes store in brown cardboard boxes, keeping them as cool and dark as possible. Check every few weeks to remove any sprouting.

    I buy in bulk every year and aim to make them last until the Easter veg offers start.
  16. AndrewWaddin-33961.57250's avatar
    Aldi will soon be top of the market place with all they’re doing
    Nav_A20's avatar
    Not if they carry on adding more and more brands.
  17. deanos's avatar
    ALDI’S FESTIVE SUPER SIX RETURNS FROM JUST 15PTo the delight of shoppers, Aldi’s cult favourite Christmas Super Six deals are returning to stores from 18th December, with festive veg staples available from just 15p.

    With research from Aldi showing that 1 in 3 (35%) Brits are worried about the cost of Christmas this year[1], these price slashes will help families keep the costs down this festive season, whilst still enjoying high quality produce.

    Included within the savvy deal is a selection of Aldi’s fresh and delicious vegetables all sourced from British suppliers, including White Potatoes (15p, 2kg), Carrots (19p, 1kg), Parsnips (19p, 500g), Red and White Cabbages (19p each), Brussels Sprouts (19p, 500g), and Swede (19p each).

    Even better, Aldi shoppers can rest assured that these amazing vegetable deals don’t come at a cost to suppliers. The supermarket carefully plans any promotions and works with British growers on a seasonally or annual fixed cost price. That means, regardless of promotional activity in store, growers receive the same fair price as usual.

    Aldi’s Festive Super Six Promotion is available in stores between 18th-24th December, while stocks last.
  18. Dmitry_77's avatar
    2 kg of potatoes for 15 p? What century are they locking to? (edited)
    kmirza's avatar
    I feel sorry for the farmers.
  19. SonOfSam's avatar
    I hope people are willing to leave a lot of these food deals to the folks that really need them, those that will struggle without products at this price.
    greg666's avatar
    This website is all about bargains for bargain hunters, don’t really understand your comment to be honest. I don’t need to struggle to be sensitive with my spending
  20. OldBoy's avatar
    Well done Aldi. This will be very helpful to many people who are struggling during these difficult times.
  21. Drooler's avatar
    M&S or nothing. None of this 19p squit or one-legged manky turkeys thanks.
    NicoOnasis's avatar
    Selfridges food court for me.
  22. eset12345's avatar
    It's not really surprising, no? 19p veg has been the norm for years, some even going lower, the same with the £20ish 5 - 6kg turkey. (edited)
  23. hooray.henry's avatar
    Im betting 9p deals again by the rest. Love a Lossleader deal.
  24. markoUK's avatar
    You have to love this site. 19p veg to the cost of Oil.
  25. SavvyZee's avatar
    Heat Applied 🔥🔥🔥
  26. beaversrus's avatar
    Oil $150 a barrel is going to kill that
  27. jb90's avatar
    When a kilo of carrots is normally 60p, I'm not sure why this is getting so much heat. This is pennies on the pound being saved.

    Commit the same prices on a proper Christmas menu of food and it would make sense.
    redCabbage4's avatar
    15p per turkey? That would be nice.
  28. dannykerner1990's avatar
    WELL, now this will paint stores that don't commit to a freeze as evil. this should then means Sainsbury will commit as they tend to copy.
    Savingwizard's avatar
    Prices already set out for Sainsburys which match those and potentially even cheaper for Turkeys per Kilo.
  29. sasuke0's avatar
    Aldi might be able to bring down interest rates
  30. greg666's avatar
    Aldi is beating up the competition thats for sure, over with the dream prices from Waitrose & co
  31. jackw33's avatar
    Mr. Bean will be at the top of the queue?
  32. yoshiiiii's avatar
    Hot hot hot
  33. TehJumpingJawa's avatar
    I hope Aldi's success, and scaling up, doesn't compromise their profitability.

    They need to steer clear of the 'huge store' paradigm that has hurt Tesco & ASDA's competitiveness in today's stagnant economy.
    Laurence_Saunders's avatar
    Their shops have got bigger over the years, but they're still significantly smaller than the others.

    I suspect their bigger issue is that much of their efficiency in the past came from having lower staff numbers. But with higher wholesale prices, that becomes a smaller piece of the pie. I suspect that's partly why prices in Lidl/Aldi have gone up far more in percentage terms.
  34. sandrabear's avatar
    Only thing is the nearest Aldi is 1.5 -2 hrs away and also no car. The family go through a lot of spuds, I'm not sure I'll be able to carry it all by bus. I really hope Tesco and Sainsbury's take part as I could get online from them and save me carrying.
    blahblahblah1234's avatar
    They will.
  35. opaque's avatar
    If they did delivery they could just dominate the Christmas market for many of these things
  36. Whatsleft's avatar
    Meh I'll just wait until the veg are free in Asda.
  37. Bolkyloren's avatar
  38. oscarozze's avatar
    Will wait till Tescos jump in.
  39. clairebearb's avatar
    Well this is a bit weird! They weren't this price in ours at 7.30am today ? (edited)
  40. Nappa_Apricota's avatar
    I paid 15p for Christmas veg this morning great deal, the wine of the week red bdx and rose was at £3.49 a bottle from £9.99 also.
's avatar