How DealRadar saves you money on every grocery trip
Grocery prices have climbed faster than almost any other line in the household budget. The average American family of four now spends between $975 and $1,300 per month just feeding itself, according to USDA cost-of-food estimates. DealRadar exists for one reason: to claw back as much of that money as physically possible, on items you were already going to buy anyway.
We do not chase clickbait or "exclusive" offers that turn out to be expired by checkout. Every coupon code on this site goes through a three-step process before it appears on a retailer page. First, we ingest it from a verified source — the retailer's own newsletter, a manufacturer rebate program, or a contributor with a receipt photo. Second, we run an automated test against the retailer's online cart to confirm the code applies. Third, our community votes on whether the code worked when they used it in store or at curbside pickup.
Three layers of grocery savings, stacked
Most shoppers leave money on the table because they only use one savings tool at a time. DealRadar shows you how to stack three layers in the same transaction:
- Coupon codes — entered at online checkout for grocery delivery, pickup, or in-store digital wallets.
- Weekly ad sales — the printed circular deals every chain rotates each Wednesday, surfaced here in a searchable format.
- Cashback rebates — bonus cash back through partner apps and linked credit cards, paid to you days after the purchase.
Used together, a $120 grocery run can return $9 in cashback, $14 in coupon savings, and another $11 in weekly ad markdowns — a combined $34 saved on a single trip. Multiply that across a year of grocery runs and you are looking at real money back in your household budget.
Below the surface, DealRadar tracks pricing trends across 1,174 grocery and supermarket chains. We know which stores reliably honor manufacturer coupons, which run the best loyalty-program bonuses, and which weeks each chain tends to discount staples like eggs, ground beef, and pantry items. That intelligence is baked into every retailer page on this site — start with your local chain and follow the tested codes from the top of the list down.
Why we are different from the other coupon sites
If you have ever clicked a "70% off groceries" headline only to discover the offer is for a single brand of cat food in a single ZIP code, you already know what most coupon aggregators do. They scrape, they republish, they never test. We built DealRadar to be the opposite. Every page on this site is hand-organized by a real person on our editorial team, every code is tested before it goes live, and the community success rate next to each coupon is calculated from actual member votes — not made up.
The site is free because we earn small affiliate commissions when you choose to claim certain cashback offers or sign up for partner credit cards. We do not let those partnerships influence which codes we publish or which retailers get featured. If a code is the best deal at a particular retailer, it goes at the top — period.