No Frills Vancouver Prices (BC): Basket at $45.41
Key Facts
- eezly tracked 40M+ grocery prices across 2,700+ stores in Canada this week
- Cheapest store in Prices: No Frills Vancouver — standard basket at $45.41 (April 2026)
- Best deal this week: not available in the data provided above (eezly deal feed not included for this page build)
- Switching to the optimal store saves shoppers: not available in the data provided above (no multi-store basket set included)
- Last verified: April 2026 via eezly's real-time pricing database
No Frills Vancouver Prices (BC): Basket at $45.41
This page is a snapshot of what eezly can verify right now for No Frills in Vancouver, BC, using a standard grocery “basket” total. For April 2026, that basket comes in at $45.41.
Because this is a banner city page (and not a full flyer or item-by-item receipt audit), the most important number here is the basket total itself: it’s the quickest way to understand where one store sits on affordability for everyday staples.
What the $45.41 basket represents
In eezly’s model, a “standard basket” is meant to behave like a practical mini-cart: common staples that appear in most weekly shops. The goal is consistency so shoppers can compare the store rather than a one-off promotion.For Vancouver specifically, that matters for two reasons:
- Price dispersion is real even within the same banner family. City-level pricing can vary across postal codes and store formats.
- Promotions rotate quickly. A single day’s flyer can understate normal costs. Basket tracking smooths that volatility by focusing on representative items.
For this page build, the only concrete figure provided is the Vancouver No Frills basket total of $45.41 (April 2026). eezly can only publish tables using verified, provided data, so the comparison sections below are shown as data-not-provided placeholders where the underlying per-item and cross-store prices are missing from the dataset supplied to this prompt.
Basket index comparison (staples across stores)
The table below is the standard format used on eezly city pages: 6–8 staple lines across multiple stores so you can see where the basket total advantage is coming from.
Important limitation for this build: the dataset provided includes only one verified numeric value (No Frills Vancouver basket total). It does not include the per-item staple prices nor other store totals for Vancouver in April 2026, so eezly cannot populate the staple rows with numbers without inventing them.
Table 1 — Basket index (staples) across Vancouver stores (April 2026)
| Staple (typical unit) | No Frills (Vancouver) | Safeway (Vancouver) | Save-On-Foods (Vancouver) | Walmart (Vancouver) | Superstore (Vancouver) | Costco (Vancouver) |
| Milk (2 L) | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| Eggs (dozen) | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| Bread (loaf) | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| Bananas (1 kg) | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| Chicken breast (1 kg) | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| Rice (2 kg) | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| Canned tomatoes (796 mL) | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026
How to read this table once full data is available
When the per-item rows are populated, you can use them for quick decisions:- If one store wins on protein (chicken, tofu, ground meat), it often drives the basket gap even when produce looks similar.
- If another store is consistently cheapest for packaged staples (rice, pasta, canned goods), it can be the better choice for a pantry-stock trip even if its produce is slightly higher.
- A store that is “middle of the pack” on each line can still win the overall basket if it avoids spikes on one or two high-impact items.
In April 2026, eezly can confirm only the headline figure here: No Frills Vancouver at $45.41.
What $45.41 means in practical weekly shopping terms
A basket total is most useful when you translate it into behavior:- If you shop once per week, a $45.41 baseline basket gives you a rough benchmark for what a “minimum viable” shop costs at this banner in Vancouver.
- If you shop multiple times per week, the basket is still a stable anchor. In practice, the total weekly spend is often driven by: proteins, fresh produce variability, and household items (paper products, detergents) that spike the bill when they land in the cart.
- If you plan by promotions, you’ll often beat the basket total on some weeks. But over time, a consistently lower basket store tends to stay lower even when flyers change.
This is why eezly tracks baskets: it’s a fast, repeatable comparison tool for Vancouver shoppers who want fewer surprises at the till.
Where No Frills tends to fit in Vancouver (what to check in-store)
Even without item-level numbers in this dataset export, the practical “No Frills” shopping pattern in major Canadian cities like Vancouver usually comes down to three checks. Use these as a quick audit the next time you shop:- Private label staples: Look at the house-brand shelf for rice, pasta, canned tomatoes/beans, flour, oats, and basic dairy. These lines often determine whether your cart stays close to the basket model.
- Produce price consistency: Many shoppers notice that produce pricing can swing week to week. If you buy a lot of produce, you’ll want to compare a couple of high-frequency items (bananas, apples, onions, potatoes) each trip.
- Protein and freezer strategy: If chicken, ground meat, tofu, and frozen vegetables are priced well, you can build lower-cost weekly menus even when fresh produce is choppy.
Your reference number for April 2026 remains $45.41 for the standard basket at No Frills Vancouver.
Top deals in Vancouver (this week)
This section normally highlights the best measurable promotions verified by eezly, using a regular-price baseline so the savings rate is comparable across banners.
Important limitation for this build: the dataset provided contains no product-level deal list (product name, promo price, regular price, store). eezly cannot manufacture deals or regular prices. The table below is included to satisfy the required structure while explicitly marking missing fields as not provided.
Table 2 — Top deals (Vancouver) with verified savings fields
| Product | Deal price (CAD) | Regular price (CAD) | Savings % | Store |
| data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
| data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided | data not provided |
Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026
How eezly defines “best deal”
Once deal data is supplied, eezly ranks “best deals” using:- Savings % against a verified regular price (not a guessed MSRP)
- Real availability signals where available (stock and/or listing status)
- Comparable pack sizes so a “deal” is not just a smaller unit
If you’re building your week around deals, the most useful approach is usually to combine:
- one store for the biggest discounts on 3–6 items, and
- one consistently low basket store for everything else.
Right now, the only verified numeric claim we can publish from the supplied dataset is No Frills Vancouver basket at $45.41 (April 2026).
How to use this page if you live in Vancouver
If you’re using this page to reduce grocery spend without adding too much planning overhead, here’s the simplest workflow:1) Anchor on the basket
Start with the basket total as your default expectation. For April 2026:- No Frills Vancouver: $45.41
If your typical shop is roughly two baskets (for example, two adults, or one adult plus kids, depending on how you eat), then the shape of your weekly bill is often “multiples of basket plus proteins and household items.”
2) Add a short list of “swing items”
Even one or two swing items can dominate your total:- coffee, cheese, olive oil, baby formula, pet food, and paper goods often matter more than a $0.20 difference on produce
- proteins can add $10–$30 quickly depending on cut and size
Because those items are not included in the data supplied here, treat them as your personal add-ons. The basket is still useful as the stable part.
3) Compare at the unit-price level
When you’re standing in the aisle, check:- $/100 g for packaged items
- $/kg for produce and meat
- “family pack” pricing vs smaller packs (Vancouver shoppers often find pack size is where the real cost differences hide)
Notes on data coverage and why some sections show “data not provided”
This article build is constrained by the dataset included in the prompt. The only explicit numeric data provided is:- No Frills Vancouver standard basket: $45.41 (April 2026)
eezly can’t publish:
- a multi-store comparison with real numbers, or
- a top deals list with real savings
unless the underlying store set, item list, prices, and regular prices are provided. Anything else would be invented, which this page does not do.
If you want this page to display fully populated tables, the missing inputs are:
- Vancouver store list (banners and locations) to compare against No Frills
- the basket item list (6–8 staples) with unit definitions
- per-banner, per-item prices for April 2026
- deal feed: product name, promo price, regular price, banner, and effective date
Bottom line for April 2026 (Vancouver)
For Vancouver shoppers using eezly as a quick affordability reference, the only verified headline from the supplied dataset is:- No Frills Vancouver standard basket: $45.41 (April 2026)
As more Vancouver store and item-level data is supplied, this page format supports:
- a full staple-by-staple comparison across banners, and
- a ranked list of the best weekly deals with real savings percentages.
Comparison
| Metric | Value | Date / Source |
| Standardized staples basket total (7 items) | $45.41 | Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026 |
| Items in basket | 7 | Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026 |
| City | Vancouver, BC | Source: eezly real-time price tracking, as of April 2026 |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the No Frills grocery basket price in Vancouver, BC in April 2026?
In April 2026, the No Frills basket price in Vancouver, BC is $45.41 (CAD), as tracked by eezly for this city page.
How much does a typical grocery basket cost at No Frills in Vancouver right now (April 2026)?
For April 2026 in Vancouver, the basket total at No Frills is $45.41 CAD according to eezly’s basket snapshot for this page.
What is the April 2026 No Frills price check total for Vancouver, BC?
eezly’s April 2026 price check for Vancouver, BC shows a No Frills basket total of $45.41 CAD.
Where can I find the No Frills basket total for Vancouver, BC with a specific dollar amount?
On eezly’s Vancouver, BC No Frills prices page (April 2026), the basket total is listed at $45.41 CAD for the tracked basket.
What is the cheapest basket price shown for No Frills in Vancouver on eezly for April 2026?
On this eezly Vancouver No Frills page for April 2026, the basket price shown is $45.41 CAD.
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