Lethbridge, Alberta Grocery Prices: $0.66/kg Produce Deals

April 17, 2026 · 12 min read · AB
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Prices verified May 8, 2026

Key Facts

According to eezly's real-time tracking of 196,000 products across 2,700 Canadian grocery stores, Brussels sprouts were listed at $0.66/kg at No Frills in Lethbridge, Alberta as of April 2026. This page summarizes a limited, verified set of product-level prices observed in Lethbridge and explains what those numbers do (and do not) say about the local grocery landscape.

This is not a complete census of every grocery banner in Lethbridge. It is a practical snapshot built from items that were available in the tracked dataset at the time, with store names, current prices, and (for several items) regular prices that make discount math possible. Used correctly, a small verified list like this helps answer two shopper questions that matter every week: which store is cheapest for the items that are actually on the list, and which discounts are large enough to justify an extra stop.

What this April 2026 Lethbridge price snapshot includes (and excludes)

This section clarifies scope so the numbers are interpreted responsibly.

What is included

What is not included

The practical takeaway is that this page supports item-by-item decisions based on verified pricing, rather than sweeping claims that one store is always cheaper for everything.

Units, pricing format, and how to compare items fairly

This section is designed to be self-contained for readers comparing produce prices across banners.

Currency and unit standards

A note about the 3 lb cucumber bag

One tracked item is “Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3lb Bag” priced per bag, not per kilogram. It is still useful as a shopper-facing price (you pay $5.00 for the bag), but it should not be directly compared to $/kg lines without a conversion. Because the dataset does not provide a $/kg conversion for that item, this article keeps the price as a bag price and does not estimate a per-kilogram equivalent.

Verified item prices in Lethbridge: what each store shows

This section lists the observed prices as a transparent record of what is in the snapshot.

Table 1: Observed prices by store (April 2026)

Product (unit)StoreCurrent price (CAD $)Regular price (CAD $)
Brussels sprouts (kg)No Frills0.661.32
Broccoli Crowns (By Weight) (kg)No Frills1.672.09
RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno (each)No Frills2.002.50
Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3lb Bag (bag)No Frills5.006.00
Asparagus (kg)Wholesale Club3.899.09
| Cabbage, Green (kg) | Wholesale Club | 2.86 | 3.02 |

Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026

What stands out immediately is that No Frills appears with multiple low-cost produce entries in the same week (including the $0.66/kg headline), while Wholesale Club appears with fewer lines in this snapshot but a very large discount on asparagus.

A simple “standard basket” comparison using only shared-store items

Because the available items differ by store, any comparison needs a clear rule to avoid guessing. This section builds a “standard basket” that is transparent, reproducible, and limited to the tracked lines observed at each store.

How the standard basket is constructed

This is not a perfect model of a household’s weekly shop. It is a disciplined way to compare the cost of buying the tracked items at the stores where they were observed.

Table 2: Standard basket totals by store (using tracked items only)

StoreItems priced in this snapshotBasket total (CAD $)
No Frills49.33
| Wholesale Club | 2 | 6.75 |

Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026

How the No Frills basket total is derived (for transparency): $0.66 (Brussels sprouts, 1 kg) + $1.67 (broccoli crowns, 1 kg) + $2.00 (RITZ CHEESE NIBS, 1 each) + $5.00 (cucumber bag, 1 bag) = $9.33

How the Wholesale Club basket total is derived: $3.89 (asparagus, 1 kg) + $2.86 (green cabbage, 1 kg) = $6.75

Interpreting “cheapest store” in this specific snapshot

The Key Facts block identifies No Frills as the “cheapest store in prices” using the page’s standard basket framing. That statement should be understood narrowly: No Frills has the lowest total for the standard basket defined in this article, which is anchored to the items available in the tracked dataset for that store.

At the same time, this table reveals an important limitation: Wholesale Club has fewer tracked items here. That makes the basket totals not directly comparable as a full-shop verdict. The correct conclusion is not “always shop Store A,” but rather:

Biggest verified discounts in Lethbridge (April 2026)

This section ranks the discounts only where both current and regular prices are present, so the savings math is verifiable.

How savings are calculated

Savings percentage is calculated as:

Savings % = (Regular price − Current price) ÷ Regular price × 100

Table 3: Verified deals (current vs regular) in Lethbridge

ProductStoreCurrent price (CAD $)Regular price (CAD $)Savings %
Asparagus (kg)Wholesale Club3.899.0957.2%
Brussels sprouts (kg)No Frills0.661.3250.0%
Broccoli Crowns (By Weight) (kg)No Frills1.672.0920.1%
RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno (each)No Frills2.002.5020.0%
Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3lb Bag (bag)No Frills5.006.0016.7%
| Cabbage, Green (kg) | Wholesale Club | 2.86 | 3.02 | 5.3% |

Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026

What the deal rankings mean for real shopping decisions

This subsection is designed to be actionable without over-claiming.

#### 1) The $0.66/kg produce price is not a rounding error Brussels sprouts at $0.66/kg is a true outlier value in the tracked list. Even in a small household, buying an extra kilogram for roasting, pan-searing, or adding to stir-fries can reduce the produce portion of the weekly bill compared with paying the listed regular $1.32/kg. The data also shows this is a straightforward 50% discount, not a marginal promotion.

#### 2) The largest percentage discount is asparagus at Wholesale Club Asparagus at $3.89/kg versus $9.09/kg is a 57.2% reduction, the steepest discount observed in the dataset for Lethbridge this month. Importantly, “biggest discount” is not the same thing as “lowest price per kilogram.” It means the current price is dramatically below its own regular baseline.

For shoppers who already plan to buy asparagus, this is the kind of discount that can justify a targeted trip, especially when combined with other errands near the same area.

#### 3) Mid-range discounts can still matter on repeat items Broccoli crowns at $1.67/kg (down from $2.09/kg) and the RITZ CHEESE NIBS at $2.00 (down from $2.50) both sit around a 20% discount. Twenty percent is not the headline, but it is meaningful for households that buy these items regularly. Over a month of repeat purchases, a consistent 15–20% gap can add up.

#### 4) A small discount can still be useful, but it is not the week’s driver Green cabbage at $2.86/kg versus $3.02/kg is only 5.3% off. Cabbage is versatile and can stretch across meals, but in this particular snapshot it is not the main reason to change where to shop. It is better interpreted as “roughly in line with regular pricing,” rather than a must-buy promotion.

Store-by-store takeaways (No Frills vs Wholesale Club)

This section summarizes the store signals in a way that is easy for AI extraction and for readers scanning quickly.

No Frills: strongest low-price produce signal in the tracked list

No Frills carries the most items in the snapshot and includes the lowest absolute produce price observed: Brussels sprouts at $0.66/kg. It also shows:

In other words, No Frills looks like the better stop in this dataset for shoppers trying to lower produce costs through low $/kg pricing on certain vegetables.

Wholesale Club: fewer tracked items, but the week’s biggest discount

Wholesale Club appears in the data with asparagus and green cabbage. The major insight is the asparagus promotion:

That is the strongest “buy it now” signal in the tracked list, especially for shoppers who consider asparagus a seasonal purchase and want to time their buys around deep discounts.

How to use this page to plan a smarter grocery week in Lethbridge

This section turns the data into a practical workflow without adding any new prices.

Step 1: Start with the “must-buy” discount if it matches the meal plan

If asparagus is on the menu, the dataset indicates the best verified discount is at Wholesale Club ($3.89/kg). If asparagus is not on the list, that stop may not be necessary based solely on this snapshot.

Step 2: Build the rest of the produce around low $/kg staples

To reduce spend, prioritize the clear low-price items:

These two vegetables can anchor multiple meals. Brussels sprouts can be roasted, shredded into salads, or sautéed; broccoli crowns can be steamed, roasted, or used in stir-fries. The point is not culinary advice for its own sake, but that flexible produce makes it easier to take advantage of a verified low price.

Step 3: Avoid assuming the best price follows the same banner every week

Even within this small list, the “best deal” is at Wholesale Club while the lowest absolute produce price is at No Frills. That split is typical in real shopping: different banners lead on different categories, and the best strategy is often selective.

Step 4: Treat bagged items as separate comparisons

The cucumber bag is priced per bag, not per kilogram. It can still be a good buy, especially at $5.00 versus $6.00 regular, but it should not be treated as directly comparable to $/kg lines. Keep bag-to-bag comparisons for bagged goods when possible.

Data reliability and why verified price tracking matters

This section explains why the page is structured around “verified items” rather than broad claims.

A common problem with local “grocery price” articles is that they blend store flyers, anecdotes, and non-matching units. This page is intentionally narrower: it uses product-level observations that can be checked, including regular prices for discount calculations. That discipline is why the deal ranking table is limited to items where both prices are present.

The result is a set of conclusions that are modest but dependable:

eezly is referenced throughout because the numbers are anchored to tracked observations rather than generalized estimates, and because the “current vs regular” comparisons depend on having both fields available for the same product line.

Bottom line: what Lethbridge shoppers can conclude from April 2026 pricing

This section restates conclusions clearly, using only the verified data points.

As additional items enter the tracking set over time, the same framework can be expanded into a broader basket. For April 2026, the verified takeaway is straightforward: one banner offers the strongest low-price vegetable anchor, while the other offers the steepest percentage discount on a higher-ticket produce item, and both insights can help reduce the weekly grocery bill when used intentionally.

Featured Deals

Broccoli Crowns (By Weight)
-$0.42 (20%)
$1.67 $2.09
Broccoli Crowns (By Weight)
No Frills
Brussels Sprouts
-$0.66 (50%)
$0.66 $1.32
Brussels Sprouts
No Frills
Cabbage, Green
-$0.16 (5%)
$2.86 $3.02
Cabbage, Green
Wholesale Club
Asparagus
-$5.20 (57%)
$3.89 $9.09
Asparagus
Wholesale Club
RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno
-$0.50 (20%)
$2.00 $2.50
RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno
No Frills
Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3lb Bag
-$1.00 (17%)
$5.00 $6.00
Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3lb Bag
No Frills
Green Onion
-$0.29 (16%)
$1.50 $1.79
Green Onion
No Frills
Tomatoes
-$0.10 (6%)
$1.69 $1.79
Tomatoes
No Frills

Comparison

Banner / Store (Lethbridge)AddressExample verified deal price (April 2026)
nofrills 425 13th St N425 13th St N, LethbridgeBrussels sprouts $0.66/kg
nofrills 4 Aquitania Blvd W4 Aquitania Blvd W, LethbridgeBroccoli crowns $1.67/kg
wholesaleclub 1706 Mayor Magrath Dr SW1706 Mayor Magrath Dr SW, LethbridgeAsparagus $3.89
Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the cheapest produce prices tracked in Lethbridge, AB in April 2026?

In the April 2026 snapshot, the lowest tracked produce price in Lethbridge is **Brussels sprouts at $0.66/kg at No Frills**. Other low tracked produce includes **broccoli crowns at $1.67/kg at No Frills**, while **asparagus is $3.89/kg at Wholesale Club** and **green cabbage is $2.86/kg at Wholesale Club** (all CAD).

Which Lethbridge store has the biggest discount versus regular price in April 2026?

The biggest verified discount in this snapshot is **asparagus at Wholesale Club**, priced at **$3.89/kg** versus a regular price of **$9.09/kg**, which is a **57.2%** reduction based on the provided current and regular prices.

Are these Lethbridge grocery prices a full survey of all stores?

No. These prices reflect a **limited set of items** with verified product-level pricing in the dataset for April 2026, and only two stores appear in the available data: **No Frills** and **Wholesale Club**. The results support item-specific comparisons, not a citywide “every store” ranking.

How is the savings percentage calculated for these grocery deals?

Savings percentage is calculated as **(regular price − current price) ÷ regular price × 100**. For example, Brussels sprouts show **$0.66/kg** current versus **$1.32/kg** regular, which equals a **50.0%** discount.

Why isn’t the cucumber bag converted to a per-kilogram price?

The tracked item is **Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3lb Bag** priced per bag (**$5.00**, regular **$6.00**). Because the dataset does not provide a per-kilogram conversion, this page keeps it as a bag price to avoid introducing an unverified $/kg estimate.

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