Pricing guides for major retailers - how each store prices, where it wins, and how to pay less.
Dyson controls its own pricing tightly, so the headline figure barely moves - but refurbished stock and the right retailer event change the maths.
Kwik Fit is one of the UK's biggest fast-fit chains, and its prices swing a lot depending on whether you book online, walk in or catch a promotion.
Marshall's gold-script, guitar-amp styling carries a premium - but UK prices swing a lot between launch RRP and the sales that follow.
Sainsbury's positions itself above the discounters on quality but leans on Nectar Prices and Aldi Price Match to stay competitive on the lines shoppers notice.
Toni & Guy sits at the premium end of the British high street, and the price you pay swings hugely with stylist grade, salon location and how much your hair needs.
UGG keeps its iconic styles at full RRP most of the year. Knowing which lines discount and where to buy genuine pairs is how you save.
A pair of Classic Clogs has a stable UK list price, but collabs, limited drops and Jibbitz add up fast - and outlet stock can be far cheaper than crocs.co.uk.
LEGO holds its recommended price tightly, so the trick is spotting the retailers and moments when sets actually drop below RRP.
Morrisons sits in the middle of the big-four supermarkets on price, but its More Card prices, butchery and bakery counters change the maths if you shop the right aisles.
Rotary is one of Britain's oldest watch names, sitting in the affordable dress-watch bracket - and its watches are almost never worth paying full RRP for.
The price on Samsung.com is rarely the floor. Trade-in, education and EPP stores, and rival electricals retailers all shift what a Galaxy or QLED actually costs.
The Gym Group is a budget, no-contract chain, but the headline monthly price swings a lot by location - a London gym can cost more than double a regional one.
Sainsbury's positions itself above the discounters on quality but leans on Nectar Prices and Aldi Price Match to stay competitive on the lines shoppers notice.
Morrisons sits in the middle of the big-four supermarkets on price, but its More Card prices, butchery and bakery counters change the maths if you shop the right aisles.
Iceland built its name on simple round-pound frozen food and big-brand bargains, but a full shop needs care - some lines beat the Big Four, others don't.
McQueens Dairies brings back traditional doorstep milk in glass bottles across much of the UK - convenient and waste-free, but priced above a supermarket pint, so it pays to understand the trade-off.
Jane Plan bills as a recurring weekly food-delivery subscription, so the real cost is the per-week rate over your chosen plan length.
Green Chef's price is driven by box size, not a single sticker - the per-serving rate falls as you add recipes and people, while intro offers mask the standard cost.
Mindful Chef prices on a per-portion basis that drops as your box gets bigger - so the headline cost depends on how many meals and servings you choose.
Prep Kitchen sells fully prepared meals priced per meal, so the headline cost falls as you order more - the per-plate price is what to compare.
Dyson controls its own pricing tightly, so the headline figure barely moves - but refurbished stock and the right retailer event change the maths.
Marshall's gold-script, guitar-amp styling carries a premium - but UK prices swing a lot between launch RRP and the sales that follow.
The price on Samsung.com is rarely the floor. Trade-in, education and EPP stores, and rival electricals retailers all shift what a Galaxy or QLED actually costs.
Sony sets the PlayStation RRP, but bundles, frequent PS Store sales and retailer discounts at Argos, Currys and Game decide what a console, game or subscription really costs.
NutriBullet's personal blenders are widely stocked, so the same model often sells for very different prices across UK retailers at the same time.
Currys lists a price, but its Price Promise, in-store deals and clearance mean the number on the shelf is often not the number you pay.
HONOR positions itself as the value challenger - strong specs for less - and its prices fall noticeably within months of launch, rewarding patient buyers.
JBL covers everything from tiny Go speakers to home soundbars, and because it is sold by so many retailers, the same model's price can swing widely - so it pays to compare.
UGG keeps its iconic styles at full RRP most of the year. Knowing which lines discount and where to buy genuine pairs is how you save.
A pair of Classic Clogs has a stable UK list price, but collabs, limited drops and Jibbitz add up fast - and outlet stock can be far cheaper than crocs.co.uk.
Rotary is one of Britain's oldest watch names, sitting in the affordable dress-watch bracket - and its watches are almost never worth paying full RRP for.
TOMS sits in the affordable end of branded casual footwear, and its classic canvas slip-ons rarely move far in price - but seasonal sales and third-party stockists can shave a fair bit off.
Accurist is a long-standing British watch name pitched at accessible prices - the RRP is rarely the real price once Argos, Goldsmiths and the brand's own sales come into play.
Camper is a premium Spanish footwear brand sitting above the high street but below designer labels - and outlet and sale pricing can change the maths a lot.
Peacocks built its name on budget-friendly everyday clothing for the whole family - here's where its prices land in 2026 and how to catch the deepest reductions.
Hollister's casual, California-inspired clothing is aimed at teens and young adults - and its UK pricing is built around almost constant promotions, so the full ticket is rarely the real price.
Yankee Candle has a high RRP and frequent sales, so timing matters more than almost any other detail - the same large jar can cost wildly different amounts.
The machine is the cheap part. SodaStream's real cost is the CO2 cylinders - and the gas exchange scheme is where you save or overspend.
Smeg sells a design premium, so its small appliances rarely discount deeply - but the same model still varies across UK retailers and dips in seasonal sales.
Toni & Guy sits at the premium end of the British high street, and the price you pay swings hugely with stylist grade, salon location and how much your hair needs.
The frame price is only the start - lens type, coatings and the eye-test fee decide what you actually pay at Vision Express.
Laser hair removal is priced by body area and by session, so the real cost depends on how many areas you treat and whether you buy a course rather than single visits.
Boots rarely competes on shelf price alone - its value lives in Advantage Card points, 3-for-2 events and member pricing. Knowing the mechanics is how you save.
From NHS prescription charges to own-label painkillers, pharmacy costs follow set rules and big own-brand savings - knowing the mechanics is how you avoid overpaying.
The Gym Group is a budget, no-contract chain, but the headline monthly price swings a lot by location - a London gym can cost more than double a regional one.
New Balance spans accessible everyday trainers and premium Made-in-UK and Made-in-USA lines - so the price gap between two pairs on the same wall can be huge. Here's how it breaks down.
adidas list prices on adidas.co.uk are the ceiling, not the going rate - outlet, JD, Sports Direct and seasonal sales routinely undercut them.
Gymshark sells almost entirely through its own site, so there are no third-party stockists to undercut it - the saving comes from timing.
Under Armour positions itself as performance kit at a mid-to-premium price, but its own outlet and frequent stockist sales mean RRP is rarely the lowest you'll pay.
Kwik Fit is one of the UK's biggest fast-fit chains, and its prices swing a lot depending on whether you book online, walk in or catch a promotion.
AnyVan doesn't have a price list - drivers quote for your job, and the cost swings on distance, volume, timing and how flexible you can be.
Peugeot's UK range runs from the compact 208 to electric SUVs, but the list price is only the starting point - finance deals, dealer discounts and trim choices decide what you really pay.
Halfords bundles parts, accessories and fitting under one roof, which is convenient but not always cheapest - here's where the motoring and cycling specialist is worth it and where it isn't.
Pets at Home sells food, accessories, grooming and vet services - and its real pricing story is loyalty, subscriptions and price-matching, not the shelf label.
Bark.com is free for customers to post a job - the cost falls on the professionals, who pay credits to respond to each lead, with prices that vary by trade.
LEGO holds its recommended price tightly, so the trick is spotting the retailers and moments when sets actually drop below RRP.
Card Factory built its name on rock-bottom greeting-card prices - here's what cards, gifts and party bits actually cost, and where it beats Clintons and Moonpig.
Coursera isn't one price - it's a free-to-audit catalogue layered with paid certificates, a Plus subscription and full degrees, each costing wildly different amounts.
EDF doesn't set one flat price - your bill is built from a standing charge plus unit rates, shaped by the Ofgem price cap and the tariff you choose.
Squarespace bills per site, with a big gap between monthly and annual rates. Understanding the tiers and renewal pricing is how you avoid overpaying.
Hostinger's headline monthly price is an introductory rate locked to a long term. The number that matters is what it renews at.
Babbel sells the same app at very different effective prices depending on how long you commit - the per-month cost is the number that matters.
Bitdefender's headline antivirus prices are heavily discounted first-year offers - the number that really matters is what it renews at.
DHL parcel pricing is driven by weight, dimensions and destination - and where you book can change the cost of the same parcel significantly.
GoDaddy's low first-year prices are the headline, but renewals, add-ons and VAT are where the real cost lives - here's how the pricing actually works.
Savers undercuts Boots and the big supermarkets on branded toiletries - but not on everything. Here's where it's genuinely cheapest and where it isn't.
John Lewis prices itself on quality, service and price matching rather than being cheapest - but its guarantees and match policy can make it better value than the sticker suggests.
Argos spans almost every category, so its pricing is a mix of competitive everyday lines, frequent clearance and big seasonal events - knowing which is which is the trick.
FindPrices does the comparison shopping for you, every time - quietly, automatically, on every product page.