No Frills Vancouver Prices: Raspberries $2.49 (BC)
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Key Facts
- eezly tracked 40M+ grocery prices across 2,700+ stores in Canada this week
- Cheapest store in Vancouver prices (available data): No Frills — mini staple basket at $13.84 (April 2026)
- Best deal this week: Tomatoes (Unico) at No Frills — $1.69 (37.17% off regular)
- Switching to the optimal store saves shoppers ~$0/week vs the most expensive option (only No Frills data provided in this snapshot)
- Last verified: April 2026 via eezly's real-time pricing database
- Currency and units: CAD ($); units shown as listed (including 3 lb bag and per-item/package entries)
According to eezly's real-time tracking of 196,000 products across 2,700 Canadian grocery stores, Vancouver shoppers can currently find Unico Tomatoes for $1.69 at No Frills as of April 2026. This page is intentionally narrow and practical: it focuses on a small set of repeat-purchase items that tend to show up in weekly grocery routines, then flags where the current price is meaningfully below the regular price.
This is not a full market-wide “cheapest grocery store” ranking for Vancouver. The dataset available here only includes No Frills pricing for the items listed, so there is no responsible way to publish competitor comparisons without inventing missing numbers. Instead, the goal is to provide a clean, verifiable baseline for a handful of staples, plus a savings breakdown where a regular price is available.
What this Vancouver No Frills snapshot includes (and what it does not)
This snapshot is built from six everyday products that cover a useful mix:- A few fresh vegetables that commonly get bought weekly (rapini, green onion, green beans)
- A bulk produce option (Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb bag)
- A pantry staple with high “meal impact” (Unico tomatoes)
- A packaged snack item many households buy periodically (RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno)
What it does not include:
- A full weekly shop across proteins, dairy, grains, and household supplies
- Cross-store price matching for Vancouver (because only No Frills data is present in the provided slice)
- “Per 100 g” or “per kg” standardization across every line item (units vary as listed in the source data)
Used properly, a page like this functions like a mini price dashboard. If these are items a household actually buys, this is the type of list that makes grocery spending more predictable month to month.
Current No Frills prices in Vancouver (April 2026)
Below are the observed prices for Vancouver, BC at No Frills, alongside the listed regular price when available. This is the most direct way to see what has changed and which items are currently priced below their usual level.Table 1 — Vancouver No Frills price check (current vs regular)
| Item (as listed) | Store | Current price (CAD) | Regular price (CAD) | Notes |
| Rapini | No Frills | $2.99 | $3.49 | Fresh vegetable staple |
| Green Onion | No Frills | $1.50 | $1.79 | Frequent weekly add-on |
| Green Beans | No Frills | $0.66 | $0.77 | Often purchased as a side |
| Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag (No Name) | No Frills | $5.00 | $6.00 | Bulk produce; plan to avoid waste |
| Tomatoes (Unico) | No Frills | $1.69 | $2.69 | Pantry staple with high flexibility |
| RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno (Christie) | No Frills | $2.00 | $2.50 | Optional snack; timing can help |
A practical way to interpret this set is to look at two things simultaneously:
- The absolute price for items that hit budgets repeatedly (green onion, beans, rapini).
- The discount size for items that are easy to stock up on without spoilage (Unico tomatoes, packaged snacks), plus bulk produce that only “wins” if it gets used.
Mini basket total: a simple baseline for Vancouver budgeting
Even with a small item set, it helps to compute a “mini basket” total so shoppers have a single number to track week over week. Using the six listed products (one unit each, as listed), the current total is:- Rapini $2.99
- Green Onion $1.50
- Green Beans $0.66
- Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag $5.00
- Tomatoes (Unico) $1.69
- RITZ CHEESE NIBS $2.00
Mini basket total (No Frills, Vancouver): $13.84
That total is not meant to represent a full grocery bill. Its value is consistency. Tracking the same small basket over time is a straightforward way to notice inflation, seasonal effects, or temporary promotions.
Biggest discounts at No Frills right now (ranked by savings)
Where both current and regular prices are available, savings can be calculated as:Savings % = (Regular − Current) / Regular × 100
This view matters because a low sticker price is not always a deal. A better question is whether the item is meaningfully cheaper than its normal level.
Table 2 — Vancouver No Frills deals ranked by savings %
| Product | Store | Current price (CAD) | Regular price (CAD) | Savings % |
| Tomatoes (Unico) | No Frills | $1.69 | $2.69 | 37.17% |
| RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno (Christie) | No Frills | $2.00 | $2.50 | 20.00% |
| Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag (No Name) | No Frills | $5.00 | $6.00 | 16.67% |
| Green Onion | No Frills | $1.50 | $1.79 | 16.20% |
| Rapini | No Frills | $2.99 | $3.49 | 14.33% |
| Green Beans | No Frills | $0.66 | $0.77 | 14.29% |
Two conclusions stand out from this discount ranking:
- The strongest value signal is the pantry item. Unico tomatoes are down by 37.17%, a large reduction for a product that can be stored and used across multiple meals.
- The produce discounts are smaller but more dependable for real budgets. Households typically buy green onions, beans, and similar vegetables repeatedly. Even modest discounts matter because they recur.
What each price means for a real Vancouver grocery shop
This section turns the raw numbers into shopping guidance. Each subsection is self-contained so it can be read independently.Tomatoes (Unico) — $1.69 (regular $2.69)
This is the clearest standout in the current dataset, with a 37.17% drop from the regular price. Pantry staples are often where grocery spending quietly escalates, because they are the “background” of so many meals. When a staple like canned tomatoes is discounted, the savings can carry through multiple recipes.Why it matters in practice:
- A can of tomatoes can anchor pasta sauce, soups, stews, chilli, or braises.
- It can reduce reliance on higher-cost prepared sauces, especially when combined with basic seasonings already in the pantry.
- It is easy to stock up responsibly because it does not create the spoilage risk that discounted produce can.
For shoppers trying to stabilize food costs, this is the type of promotion worth noticing. It is not only the $1.00 saved per can versus regular price; it is the flexibility the ingredient adds to meal planning.
Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag (No Name) — $5.00 (regular $6.00)
The “Naturally Imperfect” line typically trades appearance for value. The price is lower than the regular tag (16.67% off), but bulk produce only works financially when it gets used.How to treat this as a genuine deal:
- Plan multiple uses early in the week (salads, sandwiches, snack prep).
- If the household is small, prioritize recipes that deliberately consume cucumbers quickly, rather than assuming they will be used casually.
- If cucumbers are already a frequent purchase, a 3 lb bag can be a predictable way to keep the fridge stocked at a better price level.
In other words, the math looks good, but the household’s “waste rate” determines whether this is a bargain or a missed opportunity.
RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno (Christie) — $2.00 (regular $2.50)
This product is discounted 20% versus regular price. Snack items are important to include in a reality-based grocery analysis because they are common, tempting, and frequently marked up.This is a deal if:
- The household already buys it regularly, and timing the purchase avoids paying the regular price.
- It substitutes for other higher-priced snacks that tend to inflate the bill.
This is not a deal if:
- It is an unplanned add-on that increases total spending.
A disciplined approach is to treat snack discounts as “nice to have” rather than the foundation of cost control. Produce and pantry items typically deliver more consistent budget impact.
Rapini — $2.99 (regular $3.49)
Rapini is discounted by 14.33%. That is not a dramatic cut, but for shoppers who buy greens frequently, these repeated small reductions can make a real difference over a month.How to evaluate the value:
- If rapini is a weekly buy, the discount is a straightforward win.
- If it is purchased occasionally, the decision should lean on menu planning. Buying a discounted vegetable that does not fit the week’s meals often leads to waste, which cancels the savings.
Green Onion — $1.50 (regular $1.79)
Green onion is down 16.20% from regular. This is the kind of small item that gets purchased often and can quietly add up over time.Why it matters:
- Green onions are frequently used as a finishing ingredient across many cuisines.
- Because they are inexpensive, shoppers may not price-check them closely, which makes regular-price drift harder to notice.
If green onion is bought weekly, a $0.29 reduction is meaningful over a year, even if it feels minor in a single trip.
Green Beans — $0.66 (regular $0.77)
Green beans show a 14.29% discount. Like green onions, the value is in repetition. Many households rotate green beans as a side dish because they are familiar, easy to cook, and pair with a wide range of meals.The key practical consideration is to buy the amount that will be used within a few days. The deal is strongest when it replaces a more expensive side or prevents a last-minute convenience purchase.
Why a small basket is more useful than a headline price
A single promotional item does not tell shoppers whether a store is affordable overall. A better signal is a consistent mini basket that includes:- At least one pantry anchor
- Multiple produce items that reflect real eating habits
- One discretionary item that tests whether “extras” are also discounted
This page’s six-item basket is designed for exactly that. Over time, tracking a small set like this can:
- Highlight whether overall pricing is trending up or down
- Show whether discounts are concentrated in pantry items or spread across produce
- Give shoppers a repeatable benchmark without needing a full receipt audit
This kind of approach pairs well with eezly-style tracking because it emphasizes verification and consistency rather than anecdote.
Cross-store comparison: why this page does not rank competitors
Many shoppers searching Vancouver grocery prices want a direct comparison across stores. That requires competitor prices observed in the same time window. The provided data slice contains only No Frills entries, and leaving blanks is more accurate than guessing.Still, it can be helpful to show the structure that a full comparison would use once additional tracked prices are available.
Table 3 — Basket index framework (No Frills populated; other stores pending)
| Staple item (as listed) | No Frills (Vancouver) | Other stores (data not provided) |
| Rapini | $2.99 | — |
| Green Onion | $1.50 | — |
| Green Beans | $0.66 | — |
| Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag (No Name) | $5.00 | — |
| Tomatoes (Unico) | $1.69 | — |
| RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno (Christie) | $2.00 | — |
Until more stores are populated, the best use of this table is as a Vancouver baseline. When more price points are available, shoppers can compare like-for-like items and see whether the store’s advantage is consistent or limited to a few promotions.
How to use this page to spend less without over-optimizing
This section offers practical, repeatable tactics based on the observed prices. It is intentionally conservative and avoids assuming household size or dietary preferences.1) Prioritize discounts that reduce the cost of complete meals
The strongest discount here is Unico tomatoes at $1.69 versus $2.69. Pantry staples like this tend to lower the cost per serving because they help build full meals.A useful rule:
- If the discounted item helps create multiple meals, it has higher budget impact than a similarly discounted snack.
2) Treat bulk produce as a “plan-required” purchase
The 3 lb cucumber bag is cheaper than its regular price, but it is only a win if the household consumes it. This is the classic tradeoff with bulk produce.A simple checklist before buying:
- Will it be used in at least two meals?
- Is there fridge space?
- Is the household realistically going to eat it within the week?
3) Capture repeated small savings on weekly vegetables
Green onion ($1.50) and green beans ($0.66) are good examples of items that many shoppers buy frequently. Even when the percentage savings is not dramatic, repetition turns small savings into meaningful annual reductions.4) Keep snack deals in perspective
RITZ CHEESE NIBS at $2.00 is a fair discount versus $2.50. For households that buy snack foods, timing these purchases can help. But snack items should not drive store choice unless the household’s spending is dominated by packaged foods.Methodology and limitations (for transparency)
This page uses prices observed for Vancouver, BC at No Frills in April 2026, sourced from eezly real-time price tracking. Regular prices were used only when provided in the dataset.Key limitations:
- Only a small number of products are included.
- Only one banner (No Frills) is represented in the provided data.
- Units vary as listed; no attempt is made to normalize every item to a single unit basis.
Despite those limitations, the page is still useful as a verified snapshot. For shoppers who track spending over time, consistent mini baskets are often more actionable than occasional full-cart comparisons.
Bottom line for Vancouver shoppers (April 2026)
This Vancouver No Frills snapshot points to a clear conclusion: the best value in this dataset is the Unico tomatoes promotion at $1.69 versus a $2.69 regular price (37.17% off). That is a high-impact pantry discount that can lower meal costs beyond a single purchase.The rest of the list reinforces a second, quieter conclusion: steady savings on weekly vegetables (green onion, green beans, rapini) are the most reliable way to keep everyday grocery costs predictable. And for bulk produce like the 3 lb cucumber bag, the savings are real, but only if the household has a plan to use the volume.
For ongoing tracking, the cleanest approach is to revisit this same mini basket each week or month as more Vancouver pricing becomes available through eezly’s database. ```
Featured Deals
Comparison
| Product | No Frills Vancouver price | Regular / typical price |
| Cheese Sticks, Cheddar (Toppers) | $2.25 | $4.49 |
| Raspberries (Half Pint) | $2.49 | $3.99 |
| Unico Tomatoes | $1.69 | $2.69 |
| Cilantro | $0.99 | $1.49 |
| Rapini | $2.99 | $3.49 |
| Sweet Kale Salad Kit (Eat Smart) | $4.99 | $6.99 |
| L’Extra Camembert (Agropur Signature) | $5.00 | $7.49 |
Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best No Frills deals in Vancouver, BC in April 2026 based on regular price?
The largest discount in the available Vancouver No Frills snapshot is Tomatoes (Unico) at $1.69 versus a $2.69 regular price, a 37.17% savings. Other discounted items include RITZ CHEESE NIBS Cheddar Jalapeno at $2.00 (down from $2.50) and the Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag at $5.00 (down from $6.00), all verified in April 2026.
How much does this mini basket cost at No Frills in Vancouver right now?
Adding one unit of each item listed (rapini, green onion, green beans, Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag, Unico tomatoes, and RITZ CHEESE NIBS) totals $13.84 at No Frills in Vancouver, based on April 2026 pricing.
Which item has the biggest percentage markdown at No Frills in Vancouver?
Tomatoes (Unico) has the biggest markdown at 37.17% off, priced at $1.69 compared with a $2.69 regular price in April 2026.
Is the 3 lb cucumber bag actually a good deal?
The Naturally Imperfect English Cucumber 3 lb Bag is discounted to $5.00 from a $6.00 regular price (16.67% off). It is a good deal if the household can use the volume within the week; otherwise, waste can eliminate the savings.
Why doesn’t this page compare No Frills to other Vancouver grocery stores?
The provided dataset includes prices only from No Frills for the listed items in April 2026. Without competitor prices tracked in the same window, a cross-store comparison would require guessing missing numbers, so other store columns are left blank.
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