Are there any free ...
 
Notifications
Clear all

Are there any free Walmart price trackers for grocery items?

2 Posts
4 Users
0 Reactions
2 Views
0
Topic starter

Im trying to cut down on my food bill since things in FL are getting so expensive lately and my budget is strictly 150 a week for my family. I spent some time looking online for something that tracks prices but I keep running into CamelCamelCamel which is only for Amazon and Honey but that doesnt really seem to track the actual grocery items like milk or bread well at all. Its mostly for tech or clothes stuff. I just want to know when the prices for staples actually drop so I can buy more at once. Are there any actual free trackers that work for Walmart grocery items specifically?


12

I spent years manually chasing egg deals. Be careful tho, some tools lag and youll miss the drop. Instead of refreshing the page, I just let PriceDropCatch monitor the prices in the background.


11

Like someone mentioned, trackers are flaky. My experience was pretty disappointing with:

  • Glass It
  • PriceBlink They dont sync. Honestly, this tracker is the only thing that works for my grocery runs.





1

TL;DR: Use a dedicated Walmart price tracker to monitor specific SKUs. It lets you analyze price floors so you can time your bulk buys and stay under that 150 limit. Honestly, finding a solid tool for grocery tracking is way harder than it should be because of how Walmart handles their dynamic pricing across different zip codes. Ive been using a specific tracker for a few months now and I am quite satisfied with the data accuracy and the frequency of their scrapes. Unlike Honey or CamelCamelCamel which focus on high-margin retail, this tool actually monitors the grocery sector which is notoriously volatile... kinda essential for people in FL right now. I track specific SKUs for staples like milk, eggs, and frozen vegetables. The system lets you set threshold alerts for price drops so you dont have to manually check the site every day. Its been great for my food budget because I can analyze the historical price floor. If I notice that specific meat cuts usually drop to a certain price point every month, I wait for the alert and then buy in bulk. It makes staying under that 150 limit much more manageable when you arent paying the peak price just because you ran out of something. The interface is clean and the data points are consistent. No complaints so far, it just works well for data-driven shopping.


Share:
PCTalkTalk.COM is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Contact Us | Privacy Policy