Cheap Groceries Adelaide: Budget Shopping Tips
Learn how to eat healthy on a budget in Adelaide. Discover seasonal produce deals at Central Market and community outlets saving locals up to 40% on groceries.
Learn how to eat healthy on a budget in Adelaide. Discover seasonal produce deals at Central Market and community outlets saving locals up to 40% on groceries.

Adelaide households spent an average of $187 on groceries in the final week of June 2026, according to retail tracking data released this month.
Food costs have climbed steadily since early 2025, pushing more residents to seek lower-priced options that still deliver vegetables, fruit and whole grains. The pressure shows up most clearly on fixed incomes and in suburbs such as Hindmarsh and Bowden where rents have risen again this quarter.
Shoppers reach the Adelaide Central Market before 8 am on weekdays to buy direct from growers. A 2 kg bag of carrots sold for $3.50 on 8 July, while broccoli heads were marked at $2 each. The same quantities cost 40 per cent more at a nearby supermarket on King William Street. A second stop at the weekly produce stall inside the Botanic Gardens on North Terrace yields discounted bunches of herbs and leafy greens left over from the previous day’s parkrun event catering.
Linear Park community gardens along the River Torrens supply free seedlings to registered volunteers every second Saturday. Participants in the 50 km trail network collect excess tomatoes and silverbeet from plots near the Morphett Street bridge, cutting weekly vegetable spend by roughly $12 per household.
Cooks who portion bulk rice and oats bought at the Central Market into five-day meals report average daily food costs of $4.80 per adult. A simple lentil and market vegetable stew prepared on Sunday stretches across lunches and dinners when paired with bread from the market bakery stalls. Residents note that checking the market’s Thursday markdown board for items nearing their display date keeps the same stew under $9 for four servings.
Those seeking further savings can register for the monthly produce box program run from the Botanic Gardens education centre, which delivers a fixed $15 selection of in-season items on the first Friday of each month. Local dietitians continue to advise anyone changing their eating patterns to speak first with a GP or community health service in their suburb.
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Published by The Daily Adelaide
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