Study: Filipinos spent less at ‘sari-sari’ stores in 2024

Photo shows a typical sari-sari store in the Philippines, where consumers are increasingly opting for smaller, more frequent purchases amid rising cost of living. PHOTO COURTESY OF INQUIRER.NET
Photo shows a typical sari-sari store in the Philippines, where consumers are increasingly opting for smaller, more frequent purchases amid rising cost of living. PHOTO COURTESY OF INQUIRER.NET

AVERAGE monthly spending at sari-sari stores continued its decline in 2024, as consumers increasingly opted for smaller, more frequent purchases to stretch their limited disposable income, according to a study.

A report released yesterday by local tech startup Packworks showed that average monthly spending by Filipinos at sari-sari stores fell to P689 each, based on insights from its micro-retail analytics platform Sari IQ.

This represents an 11.8-percent drop from the P781 average in 2023, which had already decreased from P800 in 2022.

Packworks Chief Data Officer Andoy Montiel said the trend points to a growing shift toward the tingi style of purchasing where consumers buy smaller quantities more frequently as a strategy to manage limited budgets.

ā€œThe combination of Filipinos’ smaller basket sizes and more frequent visits to sari-sari stores points to a preference for buying in smaller, more affordable portions – the essence of the ā€˜tingi’ economy,ā€ Montiel said.

ā€œThis behavior likely stems from consumers needing to stretch their budget further, even in a lower inflation environment. They might be opting to buy only what they immediately need, rather than larger quantities less frequently to stock-up,ā€ he added.

Packworks’ data also revealed that while average spending by Filipinos decreased, their visits to sari-sari stores became more frequent.

Last year, its network of stores recorded an average of 18 transactions per month nationwide, reflecting a 16-percent increase from 15 transactions per month in 2023.

The most commonly purchased items in Filipino sari-sari stores were seasoning and recipe mixes, detergent, powdered drinks, and hygiene products like shampoo and conditioner. (Alden M. Monzon Ā© Philippine Daily Inquirer)

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here