The later timing of Black Friday in 2024 meant that 1-7 December data period included the final days of the Black Friday discounting period (including Cyber Monday), while the Black Friday discounting period had passed by December 2023. This means Non-food prices are likely to appear more deflationary than the underlying trend.
Period Covered: 01 – 07 December 2024
- Shop Price deflation was 1.0% in December, down from deflation of 0.6% in the previous month. This is below the 3-month average rate of -0.8%. Shop price annual growth remained at its lowest rate since August 2021.
- Non-Food remained in deflation at -2.4% in December, edging down from -1.8% in the preceding month. This is below the 3-month average rate of -2.1%. Deflation is its most since April 2021.
- Food inflation was unchanged at 1.8% in December. This is in line with the 3-month average rate of 1.8%. The annual rate has eased considerably since the start of the year and inflation remained at its lowest rate since December 2021.
- Fresh Food inflation was unchanged in December, at 1.2%. This is slightly above the 3-month average rate of 1.1%. Inflation was its lowest since November 2021.
- Ambient Food inflation edged up to 2.8% in December, from 2.7% in November. This is in line with the 3-month average rate of 2.8% and remained at its lowest since February 2022
Helen Dickinson, Chief Executive of the BRC, said:
“Retailers discounted heavily for Black Friday this year as they attempted to make up for weaker sales earlier in the year. However, the later Black Friday timing brought many of the non-food discounts into the measurement period, making non-food prices look more deflationary than the underlying trend. With food inflation bottoming out at 1.8%, and many price pressures on the horizon, shop price deflation is likely to become a thing of the past.
“Retailers discounted heavily for Black Friday this year as they attempted to make up for weaker sales earlier in the year. However, the later Black Friday timing brought many of the non-food discounts into the measurement period, making non-food prices look more deflationary than the underlying trend. With food inflation bottoming out at 1.8%, and many price pressures on the horizon, shop price deflation is likely to become a thing of the past.
“As retailers battle the £7 billion of increased costs in 2025 from the Budget, including higher employer NI, National Living Wage, and new packaging levies, there is little hope of prices going anywhere but up. Modelling by the BRC and retail CFOs suggest food prices will rise by an average of 4.2% in the latter half of the year, while Non-food will return firmly to inflation. Government can still take steps to mitigate these price pressures, and it must ensure that its proposed reforms to business rates do not result in any stores paying more in rates than they do already.”
Mike Watkins, Head of Retailer and Business Insight, NielsenIQ, said:
“During December, shoppers benefited from both lower inflation than last year and bigger discounts as both food and non-food retailers were keen to drive sales after a slow start to the quarter. However, higher household costs are unlikely to dissipate anytime soon so retailers will need to carefully manage any inflationary pressure in the months ahead.”